Specimens of Modern English Literary CriticismWilliam Tenney Brewster Macmillan, 1925 - 379 páginas |
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Página vii
... PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY : A Defence of Poetry NOTES AND QUESTIONS ON THE PRECEDING SELECTIONS LIST OF BOOKS REFERRED TO IN THE INTRODUCTION AND THE NOTES 356 INDEX • 361 INTRODUCTION I THE once common and popular notion that criticism vii.
... PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY : A Defence of Poetry NOTES AND QUESTIONS ON THE PRECEDING SELECTIONS LIST OF BOOKS REFERRED TO IN THE INTRODUCTION AND THE NOTES 356 INDEX • 361 INTRODUCTION I THE once common and popular notion that criticism vii.
Página ix
William Tenney Brewster. INTRODUCTION I THE once common and popular notion that criticism is fault- finding , more or less direct and pointed , more or less elaborate , is so far passing out of use that it may be dismissed with a word ...
William Tenney Brewster. INTRODUCTION I THE once common and popular notion that criticism is fault- finding , more or less direct and pointed , more or less elaborate , is so far passing out of use that it may be dismissed with a word ...
Página xi
... common and how criticism may be defined . II The most obvious answer to the foregoing query is that each of these writers is expressing what is for him a reality , or truth , or fact , with regard to the theory of criticism or , in its ...
... common and how criticism may be defined . II The most obvious answer to the foregoing query is that each of these writers is expressing what is for him a reality , or truth , or fact , with regard to the theory of criticism or , in its ...
Página xii
... common . The principle is a very obvious one , but it is so often lost sight of that it seems necessary to exploit it once more ; for people are prone to cling to the word of distinguished critics and catchpenny reviewers as if it ...
... common . The principle is a very obvious one , but it is so often lost sight of that it seems necessary to exploit it once more ; for people are prone to cling to the word of distinguished critics and catchpenny reviewers as if it ...
Página xiii
... common sense , and are therefore understood by everybody , without thinking . They are like our own names , which seem the most familiar and appropriate things in the world — until we begin repeating them and revolving them in our minds ...
... common sense , and are therefore understood by everybody , without thinking . They are like our own names , which seem the most familiar and appropriate things in the world — until we begin repeating them and revolving them in our minds ...
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Términos y frases comunes
admiration alliteration Arnold artistic beauty Besant better called Canterbury Tales character Chaucer classic Coleridge Cowley Dickens Dickens's distinction Dryden Edgar Poe effect English essay estimate example expression eyes fact faculty fancy feeling fiction genius George Eliot give human idea imagination impression intellectual interest John Ruskin judgment kind language less literary criticism literature living manner matter means metaphysical poets Milton mind modern moral nature never Nevermore novel object opinion Ovid passion peculiar perfect perhaps Petrarch philosophical Pickwick Papers pleasure Poe's poem poet poetic poetry principle prose question Quincey Quincey's reader reason regard Robert Montgomery Ruskin seems sense Shakespeare sort soul sound speak spirit stanza story style Suspiria Swift taste things thou thought tion true truth Ulalume Venus and Adonis verse Virgil whole words Wordsworth writing