T.S. Eliot on ShakespeareUMI Research Press, 1987 - 139 páginas |
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Página 8
... metaphor which has this effect ; and as in most good metaphor , you can hardly say where the metaphorical and the literal meet . 11 This line from Antony and Cleopatra is one Eliot will quote and comment on repeatedly in his career ...
... metaphor which has this effect ; and as in most good metaphor , you can hardly say where the metaphorical and the literal meet . 11 This line from Antony and Cleopatra is one Eliot will quote and comment on repeatedly in his career ...
Página 26
... metaphorical meet . The burden of Eliot's comment on Shake- speare's metaphor during the twenties is that the metaphor is the realization of thought . Thought is , as it were , the object . The metaphor , like the word , pre- sents us ...
... metaphorical meet . The burden of Eliot's comment on Shake- speare's metaphor during the twenties is that the metaphor is the realization of thought . Thought is , as it were , the object . The metaphor , like the word , pre- sents us ...
Página 27
... metaphor is necessary to " what suggests it " ; the two take form in one another . The metaphor is a new and singular thing , not just a figurative trans- lation for what might be known in another way . Eliot goes on about this ...
... metaphor is necessary to " what suggests it " ; the two take form in one another . The metaphor is a new and singular thing , not just a figurative trans- lation for what might be known in another way . Eliot goes on about this ...
Contenido
Early Criticism and the Hamlet Essay | 5 |
Developing a View of the Shakespeare Play | 23 |
192737 | 55 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 5 secciones no mostradas
Términos y frases comunes
achieved action Antony appears artist audience becomes begins belief bring called character clear close comes contrast Coriolanus criticism Dante direct discussion Donne dramatists early effect Eliot Eliot says Elizabethan emotion essay experience expression feeling final gives goes Hamlet human idea imagination important individual intellectual interest interpretation introduction involved Jonson Knight language late later Lectures Letter lines literary living London Macbeth Massinger matter meaning metaphor mind nature notes object offer particular pattern perhaps period philosophy play poem poet Poetic Drama poetry popular praise present Press produced prose quotes reality references regard relation remarks repr ritual says scene seen sense Shake Shakespeare shows speaks speare speech stage suggests T. S. Eliot taken takes talk theater thing thinking thought tion tragedy University verse vision wants whole Wilson writing