Literature and CriticismBookland, 1963 - 287 頁 |
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第 1 到 3 筆結果,共 82 筆
第 17 頁
... critic ; his criticism will be criticism , and not the satisfaction of a suppressed creative wish -- which , in most other persons , is apt to interfere fatally " ( The Sacred Wood p . 7 ) . The parenthesis " each within his own ...
... critic ; his criticism will be criticism , and not the satisfaction of a suppressed creative wish -- which , in most other persons , is apt to interfere fatally " ( The Sacred Wood p . 7 ) . The parenthesis " each within his own ...
第 85 頁
... criticism " ( Atkins ) . Earlier critics had also tried to do it . Addison , in his priggish and yet mediocre way , wanted to foster sounder literary taste and Pope collected the principles preached by authorities whose footsteps he ...
... criticism " ( Atkins ) . Earlier critics had also tried to do it . Addison , in his priggish and yet mediocre way , wanted to foster sounder literary taste and Pope collected the principles preached by authorities whose footsteps he ...
第 201 頁
... criticism , how- ever , can only be accepted with some reservation : " The modern analytic critic is generally ... criticism can be no more than a reasoned account of the feeling produced upon the critic by the book he is criticizing ...
... criticism , how- ever , can only be accepted with some reservation : " The modern analytic critic is generally ... criticism can be no more than a reasoned account of the feeling produced upon the critic by the book he is criticizing ...
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常見字詞
action Addison admiration aesthetic ancient appreciate Aristotle Arnold artist asserted Atkins beauty Ben Jonson blank verse century characters Chaucer classical Coleridge comedy creative D. H. Lawrence dramatic Dryden emotions English Literary Criticism epic Essay expression F. R. Leavis faculty fancy feeling follow French genius give Greek Homer human I. A. Richards ibid idea images imagination imitation impression Johnson judge judgment language literature Longinus Matthew Arnold means metre Milton mind 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 prose reader reason regarded rhyme romantic rules Saintsbury sense Shakespeare Shelley Sidney Spenser spirit stage style sublime T. E. Hulme T. S. Eliot taste theory things thought tion Tragedy truth understand unity Wimsatt and Brooks words Wordsworth writers