English Critical Texts: 16th Century to 20th CenturyDennis Joseph Enright, Ernst De Chickera Oxford University Press, 1962 - 398 頁 |
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第 1 到 3 筆結果,共 36 筆
第 183 頁
... composition , or this or that expression , but , to such and such classes of people it will appear mean or ludicrous ! This mode of criticism , so 810 destructive of all sound unadulterated judgement , is almost universal : let the ...
... composition , or this or that expression , but , to such and such classes of people it will appear mean or ludicrous ! This mode of criticism , so 810 destructive of all sound unadulterated judgement , is almost universal : let the ...
第 184 頁
... composition , composition to which he has peculiarly attached the endearing name of Poetry ; and all men feel an habitual gratitude , and something of an honourable bigotry , for the objects which have long continued to please 850 them ...
... composition , composition to which he has peculiarly attached the endearing name of Poetry ; and all men feel an habitual gratitude , and something of an honourable bigotry , for the objects which have long continued to please 850 them ...
第 189 頁
... composition be in prose or 1045 in verse , they require and exact one and the same language . Metre is but adventitious to composition , and the phraseology for which that passport is necessary , even where it may be graceful at all ...
... composition be in prose or 1045 in verse , they require and exact one and the same language . Metre is but adventitious to composition , and the phraseology for which that passport is necessary , even where it may be graceful at all ...
內容
An Essay of Dramatic Poesy | 50 |
An Essay on Criticism III | 111 |
Preface to Shakespeare | 131 |
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action admiration Aeneid alive ancient Aristotle beauty Ben Jonson better blank verse character Chaucer Cicero classics comedy composition Crites criticism D. H. LAWRENCE delight diction divine doth drama Dryden effect emotion English Euripides excellent express F. R. LEAVIS faults feelings French genius give Greek hath Homer honour Horace human humour imagination imitation Johnson judgement Keats Keats's kind knowledge language learning Lisideius living manner Metaphysical Poets metre metrical mind modern moral nature never object observed passions perfection perhaps persons philosopher Plato Plautus play pleasure plot Plutarch poem poesy poet poet's poetic poetry praise produced prose reader reason rhyme rules scenes sense Shakespeare Silent Woman soul speak spirit stage stanza style T. S. ELIOT things thought tion tragedy true truth unity Velleius Paterculus Virgil virtue words Wordsworth write