Literature and CriticismBookland, 1963 - 287 頁 |
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第 1 到 3 筆結果,共 62 筆
第 36 頁
... never come from them one Sense , worth the life of a Day . A Rymer , and a Poet , are two things . It is said of Virgil , that he brought forth his Verses like a Beare , and after form'd them with licking ... Indeed , things wrote with ...
... never come from them one Sense , worth the life of a Day . A Rymer , and a Poet , are two things . It is said of Virgil , that he brought forth his Verses like a Beare , and after form'd them with licking ... Indeed , things wrote with ...
第 137 頁
... never loved sae kindly , Had we never sae blindly , Never met , or never parted ,. We had ne'er been broken - hearted . " But a whole poem of that quality " , Arnold assured his readers , " Burns cannot make " . According to him Burns's ...
... never loved sae kindly , Had we never sae blindly , Never met , or never parted ,. We had ne'er been broken - hearted . " But a whole poem of that quality " , Arnold assured his readers , " Burns cannot make " . According to him Burns's ...
第 203 頁
... never clear whether the writer of these lines ever had any idea of the ambiguous nature of the arrangement of words made by him . If he never had any intention of infusing ambiguity into his expressions , what is the point in finding ...
... never clear whether the writer of these lines ever had any idea of the ambiguous nature of the arrangement of words made by him . If he never had any intention of infusing ambiguity into his expressions , what is the point in finding ...
內容
Poets and criticsPlato and AristotleA critical | 1 |
CHAPTER | 20 |
George WhetstoneNasheBen JonsonNotes 3439 | 34 |
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action Addison admiration aesthetic ancient appreciate Aristotle Arnold artist asserted Atkins beauty Ben Jonson Biographia Literaria blank verse century Chapter characters Chaucer classical Coleridge comedy creative drama dramatists Dryden emotions English Literary Criticism Epic Epic poetry Essay expression F. R. Leavis faculty fancy feel follow French genius Greek Homer Horace human I. A. Richards ibid idea images imagination imitation impression Johnson judge judgment language literature Longinus Matthew Arnold means metre Milton mind modern moral nature neo-classic rules neo-classical never noted objects observed Oscar Wilde passage passion plays pleasure plot poem poet poet's poetic diction poetry pointed Pope Preface principles produced proper prose readers reason rhyme romantic rules Saintsbury sense Shakespeare Shelley Sidney Spenser spirit stage style T. S. Eliot taste theory things thought three unities tion Tragedy understand unity Wimsatt and Brooks words Wordsworth writing