| William Morley Punshon - 1881 - 296 páginas
...invention as, by producing something unex. pected, surprises and delights. The topics of devotion aro few, and being few are universally known ; but few...sentiment, and very little from novelty of expression." Such an unworthy definition of poetry might answer for an age of lampooners, when merry quips and fantastic... | |
| William Morley Punshon - 1882 - 500 páginas
...poetry is invention ; such invention as, by producing something unexpected, surprises and delights. The topics of devotion are few, and being few are...sentiment, and very little from novelty of expression." Such an unworthy definition of poetry might answer for an age of lampooners, when merry quips and fantastic... | |
| William Morley Punshon - 1882 - 520 páginas
...poetry is invention ; such invention as, by producing something unexpected, surprises and delights. The topics of devotion are few, and being few are...sentiment, and very little from novelty of expression." Such an unworthy definition of poetry might answer for an age of lampooners, when merry quips and fantastic... | |
| 1890 - 660 páginas
...yet certainly have yielded the fullest contentment to the Inquisition. Johnson says : " The topicks of devotion are few, and being few, are universally...sentiment, and very little from novelty of expression." The stage is a magician, with strange and singular gifts and powers, who exacts rigidly his dues both... | |
| Henry Schütz Wilson - 1896 - 308 páginas
...yet certainly have yielded the fullest contentment to the Inquisition. Johnson says : ' The topicks of devotion are few, and being few, are universally...sentiment, and very little from novelty of expression.' The stage is a magician, with strange and singular gifts and powers, who exacts rigidly his dues both... | |
| Royal Society of Literature (Great Britain) - 1899 - 572 páginas
...Johnson, following Pope, declares that "the essence of poetry is invention," and goes on to say that " poetry pleases by exhibiting an idea more grateful to the mind than things themselves afford." Wordsworth maintained that " poetry is the spontaneous overflow of powerful feeling;" while Coleridge,... | |
| Arthur Edwin Gregory - 1905 - 374 páginas
...find expression in a hymn.' 1 Dr. Johnson declared that sacred poetry must always be poor because ' the topics of devotion are few, and being few are universally known ; but few as they are can be made no more.' To this criticism Keble replied in his essay on Sacred Poetry — How can the... | |
| Stendhal - 1907 - 258 páginas
...pleasure than language not so arranged, and that, as Johnson says, a metrical composition pleases us ' by exhibiting an idea more grateful to the mind than things themselves afford.' If it is true that there can be poetry without metre, alliteration or rime, just as there are pictures... | |
| Stendhal - 1907 - 254 páginas
...pleasure than language not so arranged, and that, as Johnson says, a metrical composition pleases us ' by exhibiting an idea more grateful to the mind than things themselves afford.1 If it is true that there can be poetry withoot metre, alliteration or rime, just as there... | |
| Noah Webster - 1912 - 1214 páginas
...organism. The writer puts Into it a portion of his own spiritual vitality, so that, as Dr. Johnson says, "poetry pleases by exhibiting an idea more grateful to the mind than things themselves afford." The analysis or separating the structure into parts, is prosodical criticism; examining why the presentation... | |
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