The History of Literary CriticismLakshmi Narain Agarwal, 1969 - 519 sidor |
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Sida 85
... tion . Such was the picture of the Duchess Blanche in Chaucer's Book of the Duchesse . Next to description comes apostrophe which is an exclamation directed to an object . It emphasises an idea and evokes an em tion . The exclamation is ...
... tion . Such was the picture of the Duchess Blanche in Chaucer's Book of the Duchesse . Next to description comes apostrophe which is an exclamation directed to an object . It emphasises an idea and evokes an em tion . The exclamation is ...
Sida 328
... tion . This alone can explain why one is not only delighted with what he visualises or intuits , but realises his oneness with it . There results a harmony between the individual and what he intuits . Such a harmony which is the work of ...
... tion . This alone can explain why one is not only delighted with what he visualises or intuits , but realises his oneness with it . There results a harmony between the individual and what he intuits . Such a harmony which is the work of ...
Sida 497
... tion is not something superadded ; nor is expression an addition to the poetic experience . L. A. Reid , therefore , puts it , ' the aesthetic unity or whole needs imagination in order to be created or realised as a whole ' . We can ...
... tion is not something superadded ; nor is expression an addition to the poetic experience . L. A. Reid , therefore , puts it , ' the aesthetic unity or whole needs imagination in order to be created or realised as a whole ' . We can ...
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The Beginnings | 5 |
Towards a theory of Expression | 60 |
Tendencies during the Renascence | 91 |
Upphovsrätt | |
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A. C. Bradley action activity aesthetic ancient appears approach argues arises Aristophanes Aristotelian Aristotle Arnold artist beauty Ben Jonson character classical Coleridge comedy concept creative critical theory criticism Croce delight diction distinction drama dramatist Dryden Eliot embodied emotion emphasised epic epic poetry Essay Euripides evokes experience expression fancy feeling function genius gives Greek hamartia harmony Hegel Homer ideal ideas images imagination imitation intuition Johnson judgment kind L. A. Reid language literary literature Longinus lyric meaning method metre mind moral neoclassical neoclassicist object observes passion philosophical Plato play pleasure plot poem poet poet's poetic poetic diction poetry Pope present principle problem Quintilian reader reality reason refers rejects relation reveals rhetoric rhythm rules says sense Shakespeare Shelley Sidney soul speaks spirit style sublime symbol symbolists taste theory things thought tion tragedy true truth unity universal verse whole words Wordsworth write