Biographia Literaria, 第 2 卷Oxford University Press, 1968 - 334 頁 |
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第 1 到 3 筆結果,共 58 筆
第 307 頁
... means . The Poet must always aim at pleasure as his specific means , but surely Milton did , and all ought to aim at something nobler as their end - viz . to cultivate and pre- dispose the heart of the Reader , ' & c . Here we have ...
... means . The Poet must always aim at pleasure as his specific means , but surely Milton did , and all ought to aim at something nobler as their end - viz . to cultivate and pre- dispose the heart of the Reader , ' & c . Here we have ...
第 314 頁
... means that it is con- sciously referred to a conception previously existing in the mind . See Kritik , ib . and p . 218 : The good is only represented through the medium of a conception ( Begriff ) as the object of universal approval ...
... means that it is con- sciously referred to a conception previously existing in the mind . See Kritik , ib . and p . 218 : The good is only represented through the medium of a conception ( Begriff ) as the object of universal approval ...
第 316 頁
... means of some accidental coincidence . ' ) The solution of the difficulty is perhaps this - that both fancy and imagination may work upon the same universal and natural associations , but that they differ in the use which is made of ...
... means of some accidental coincidence . ' ) The solution of the difficulty is perhaps this - that both fancy and imagination may work upon the same universal and natural associations , but that they differ in the use which is made of ...
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常見字詞
admiration agreeable Apollo Belvedere appear beauty Bertram Biog Brougham Castle character Coleridge Coleridge's common composed composition critic Dane definition delight diction distinction drama Edinburgh Review edition effect Elbe English Ennead equally Essay excellence excitement expression faculties fancy feeling former German Greek Hamburg heart human images imagination imitation instance intellectual interest judgement Kant Klopstock Kotzebue lady language Lectures less Letters lines Lyrical Ballads means ment metre Milton mind moral nature object opinion original passage passion perhaps person philosopher pleasure Plotinus poem poet poet's poetry Preface present principle prose published 1807 Ratzeburg reader reason recollect Review rhyme rustic Samuel Daniel Sara Coleridge scene seems sense Shakespeare sonnet soul speaking specimens spirit stanza style sweet taste thing thou thought tion translation truth unity Venus and Adonis verse whole words Wordsworth writings καὶ