Romantic Reassessment, 第 4-6 卷Institut für Englische Sprache und Literatur, Universität Salzburg., 1972 |
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第 1 到 3 筆結果,共 67 筆
第 64 頁
... emotions per se . Objection to direct assertion of thought or emotion has two aspects : first , sub- jective expression as such is inappropriate ; second , the kind of a t 19 Hulme , p . 128 Ibid . , p . 133 . 21 Ibid . , p . 134 . Ibid ...
... emotions per se . Objection to direct assertion of thought or emotion has two aspects : first , sub- jective expression as such is inappropriate ; second , the kind of a t 19 Hulme , p . 128 Ibid . , p . 133 . 21 Ibid . , p . 134 . Ibid ...
第 67 頁
... emotion can prove disastrous , in poetry as in life . On the other hand , an injudicious direction or overstrin- gent control of emotion may prove equally disastrous . The arbitrary damming up or segregation of emotion within a ...
... emotion can prove disastrous , in poetry as in life . On the other hand , an injudicious direction or overstrin- gent control of emotion may prove equally disastrous . The arbitrary damming up or segregation of emotion within a ...
第 69 頁
emotion . If the poet is emotionally concerned with formal qualities , his emotion is of this type ; if he is concerned with other kinds of emotion , we get these . The answer to the aestheticist argument is that we are not faced with ...
emotion . If the poet is emotionally concerned with formal qualities , his emotion is of this type ; if he is concerned with other kinds of emotion , we get these . The answer to the aestheticist argument is that we are not faced with ...
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常見字詞
aesthetic appears authors beauty become believe Brooks called character complete concept concerned considered course Critics death describes earth emotion English eros Essays evidence evil example existence experience expression fact feeling final freedom give heart human idea ideal imagination indicate influence interest John kind knowledge least Leavis letter liberty light lines literary literature living London man's matter means Milton mind moral nature never object original particular passage passion perhaps philosophical poem poet poet's poetic poetry position Prelude present Prometheus prose pure question Ransom reader reason reference regard remarks Romantic says seems sense Shelley Shelley's shows similar soul speaks spirit stanza statement suggest sympathy things thou thought tion translation true truth University verse vision whole Wordsworth writings York