American Criticism: A Study in Literary Theory from Poe to the PresentRussell & Russell, 1962 - 273 psl. |
Knygos viduje
Rezultatai 1–3 iš 46
46 psl.
... vision of loveli- ness to which we must return for a moment . In the funereal gloom of the chasm , as the reader may recall , ' the windings became more frequent and intricate , and seemed often as if returning in upon themselves , so ...
... vision of loveli- ness to which we must return for a moment . In the funereal gloom of the chasm , as the reader may recall , ' the windings became more frequent and intricate , and seemed often as if returning in upon themselves , so ...
50 psl.
... vision ' are too limited , Poe sets down as a critical canon this assertion : ' The relative extent of these peripheries of poetical vision must ever be a primary consideration in our classification of poets . ' This is surely a sound ...
... vision ' are too limited , Poe sets down as a critical canon this assertion : ' The relative extent of these peripheries of poetical vision must ever be a primary consideration in our classification of poets . ' This is surely a sound ...
98 psl.
... vision , the poet must have , and above it qualitative excellence , ' a vision fit for such a faculty ' ; and consequently , says Emer- son , ' when we speak of Poet in the great sense , we seem to be driven to such examples as Ezekiel ...
... vision , the poet must have , and above it qualitative excellence , ' a vision fit for such a faculty ' ; and consequently , says Emer- son , ' when we speak of Poet in the great sense , we seem to be driven to such examples as Ezekiel ...
Kiti leidimai - Peržiūrėti viską
American Criticism– A Study in Literary Theory from Poe to the Present Norman Foerster Visos knygos peržiūra - 1928 |
American Criticism– A Study in Literary Theory from Poe to the Present Norman Foerster Visos knygos peržiūra - 1928 |
American Criticism– A Study in Literary Theory from Poe to the Present Norman Foerster Trumpų ištraukų rodinys - 1956 |
Pagrindiniai terminai ir frazės
æsthetic American Aristotle artist assertion attain beauty Carlyle century classical Coleridge conception creative creed culture Dante democracy divine doctrine Emerson English essay ethical Europe example experience expression fact faculty faith feeling feudal genius give Goethe Greek harmony Homer human humanist idea ideal imagination impressionist inspiration intellectual intuition kind Leaves of Grass literary criticism literature living Lowell Lowell's means melancholy merely Milton mind modern moral nature naturistic never organic passage passion past perfect philosophy Philosophy of Composition Plato pleasure Plutarch Poe's poem poet poetic poetic principle poetry Preface principles prose Puritan qualities realism reality reason regarded relation religion romantic Romantic Movement romanticism sense sentiment Shakspere soul spirit supernal theory things thought tion to-day tradition Transcendental true truth ture unity universal verse virtue vision Walt Whitman Whitman whole words Wordsworth writes