Biographia LiterariaJ.M. Dent, 1947 - 305 頁 |
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第 1 到 3 筆結果,共 48 筆
第 37 頁
... judgment , and were now about to censure without reason.1 That this conjecture is not wide from the mark , I am induced to believe from the noticeable fact , which I can state on my own knowledge , that the same general censure has been ...
... judgment , and were now about to censure without reason.1 That this conjecture is not wide from the mark , I am induced to believe from the noticeable fact , which I can state on my own knowledge , that the same general censure has been ...
第 211 頁
... judgment he should proceed from charge to charge of tameness and raving ; flights and flatness ; and at length , consigning the author to the house of incurables , should conclude with a strain of rudest contempt evidently grounded in ...
... judgment he should proceed from charge to charge of tameness and raving ; flights and flatness ; and at length , consigning the author to the house of incurables , should conclude with a strain of rudest contempt evidently grounded in ...
第 230 頁
... judgment is a positive command of the moral law , since the reason can give the principle alone , and the conscience bears witness only to the motive , while the application and effects must depend on the judgment : when we consider ...
... judgment is a positive command of the moral law , since the reason can give the principle alone , and the conscience bears witness only to the motive , while the application and effects must depend on the judgment : when we consider ...
內容
CHAPTER | 1 |
Supposed irritability of men of genius brought to | 14 |
The authors obligations to critics and the prob | 25 |
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常見字詞
A. D. Lindsay admiration appear Aristotle beauty become cause CHAPTER character Coleridge commencement common compositions consciousness criticism deemed diction distinct Edited effect English equally Ernest Rhys Essays excitement existence express eyes faculty fancy feelings former genius George Saintsbury German Grace Rhys Greek ground heart honour human idea imagination imitation impression instance intellectual intelligence Intro Introduction Jacobinism judgment knowledge language latter learned least less lines literary Lyrical Ballads meaning metaphysics metre Milton mind moral nature never notions object once original passage passion perhaps person philosopher Plato pleasure Plotinus poems poet poetic poetry possible present principles prose Ratzeburg reader reason S. T. Coleridge sensation sense Shakespeare Sonnet soul Spinoza spirit style supposed Synesius talent taste things thought tion Translated true truth Venus and Adonis verse vols whole words Wordsworth's writer καὶ τὸ