Gateway to the Great Books: Critical essaysRobert Maynard Hutchins, Mortimer Jerome Adler Encyclopaedia Britannica, 1963 - 411 páginas Complements the Great Books of the Western World, includes only shorter works. |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 93
Página 157
... feeling of which I speak is only experienced in a very peculiar moral disposition , nor must it be confounded with the feeling awakened in us by the joy- ous activity of children . The feeling of which I speak is calculated rather to ...
... feeling of which I speak is only experienced in a very peculiar moral disposition , nor must it be confounded with the feeling awakened in us by the joy- ous activity of children . The feeling of which I speak is calculated rather to ...
Página 176
... feeling , that he is contented with the imitation of the real world , he can only be placed , with regard to his subject , in a single relation . And in this respect he has no choice as to the manner of treating it . If simple poetry ...
... feeling , that he is contented with the imitation of the real world , he can only be placed , with regard to his subject , in a single relation . And in this respect he has no choice as to the manner of treating it . If simple poetry ...
Página 197
... feeling of a loss , and not the joyous feeling of a hope . As these poems can only attain their end by dispensing with all art , and by sim- plifying human nature , they have the highest value for the heart , but they are also far too ...
... feeling of a loss , and not the joyous feeling of a hope . As these poems can only attain their end by dispensing with all art , and by sim- plifying human nature , they have the highest value for the heart , but they are also far too ...
Contenido
VIRGINIA WOOLF 1 | 1 |
SAINTEBEUVE | 62 |
SIR FRANCIS BACON | 90 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 9 secciones no mostradas
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Gateway to the Great Books: Critical essays Robert Maynard Hutchins,Mortimer Jerome Adler Vista de fragmentos - 1963 |
Términos y frases comunes
action admiration ancient beauty believe Canto character Chaucer classic Coleridge comedy criticism culture Dante Dante's delight divine Divine Comedy drama effect emotion English English poetry essay experience expression faculty feeling Frederic Harrison genius give Goethe harmony heart Homer human nature idea ideal imagination imitate interest judgment kind knowledge Lamb language Leaves of Grass less literature living Macbeth manner matter means mind modern Molière Montaigne moral Nether Stowey never object ourselves passion perfection perhaps person Petrarch philosophy play pleasure poem poetic poetry Pope praise principles produce Purgatorio reader reality reason religion Sainte-Beuve satire scenes seems sense sensuous sentimental poet Shakespeare simple poet simplicity soul speak spirit style taste things thought tion true truth understanding verse Virgil Virginia Woolf virtue Vita Nuova Voltaire Western World whole words write