An Essay of Dramatic Poesy: A Defence of an Essay of Dramatic PoesyBobbs-Merrill, 1965 - 119 páginas This is an OCR edition without illustrations or index. It may have numerous typos or missing text. However, purchasers can download a free scanned copy of the original rare book from GeneralBooksClub.com. You can also preview excerpts from the book there. Purchasers are also entitled to a free trial membership in the General Books Club where they can select from more than a million books without charge. Original Published by: Clarendon Press in 1889 in 177 pages; Subjects: Drama; Drama / General; Drama / American; Drama / English, Irish, Scottish, Welsh; Literary Criticism / General; Literary Criticism / Semiotics & Theory; Literary Criticism / Drama; Literary Criticism / Poetry; Performing Arts / Theater / Playwriting; Poetry / American / General; Poetry / English, Irish, Scottish, Welsh; |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 14
Página xi
... imagination from its role as an image - making faculty that it had occupied in too much seventeenth - century criticism and in arguing the case for the imagination's creative potentialities and the freedom of the artist . On the ...
... imagination from its role as an image - making faculty that it had occupied in too much seventeenth - century criticism and in arguing the case for the imagination's creative potentialities and the freedom of the artist . On the ...
Página xvi
... imagination and of poetry's imitation of nature . Assigning far greater stature to the imagination than Hobbes's mechanis- tic psychology did , he sees the faculty as creative , as capable of revealing truth . " Imagination , " he says ...
... imagination and of poetry's imitation of nature . Assigning far greater stature to the imagination than Hobbes's mechanis- tic psychology did , he sees the faculty as creative , as capable of revealing truth . " Imagination , " he says ...
Página 72
... imagination would raise either irregularly or loosely . At least , if the poet commits errors with this help , he would make greater and more without it : ' tis , in short , a slow and painful , but the surest kind of working . Ovid ...
... imagination would raise either irregularly or loosely . At least , if the poet commits errors with this help , he would make greater and more without it : ' tis , in short , a slow and painful , but the surest kind of working . Ovid ...
Contenido
An Essay of Dramatic Poesy | 3 |
A Defence of an Essay of Dramatic Poesy | 73 |
Preface to the Fables | 94 |
Derechos de autor | |
Términos y frases comunes
acknowledge action admiration Aeneid answer argument Aristotle Art of Poetry audience Bartholomew Fair beauties Ben Johnson Berkeley betwixt blank verse Boccace CALIFORNIA LIBRARY Canterbury Tales Catiline characters Chaucer Comedy commend compass concernment confess Corneille Crites criticism delight discourse Dramatic Poesy Duke of Lerma endeavour English epic Essay of Dramatic Eugenius excellent fancy farther faults Fletcher French genius greater Homer honour Horace humour ibid imagination imitation of Nature John Dryden Johnson judge judgment kind language Latin leave Lisideius lived Neander never numbers observed opinion Ovid passions persons Plautus pleasing plot poem poet Preface prose prove reader reason represented rest rhyme Roman rule satire scene Sejanus Seneca sense serious plays Shakespeare Silent Woman speak stage story supposed Tale Terence things thoughts tion Tis true tragedies translated truth Unity of Place UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA unnatural Velleius Paterculus Virgil words writ write