English Literature: A Critical SurveyPitman, 1951 - 316 sidor |
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Sida 3
... imaginative experience than it would be by one that was real . This is because language contains within itself certain powers of stimulating the imagination . The individual word is thus endowed with potency , but there is a still ...
... imaginative experience than it would be by one that was real . This is because language contains within itself certain powers of stimulating the imagination . The individual word is thus endowed with potency , but there is a still ...
Sida 25
... imagination ; the pleasure of the reader is similarly of an intellectual rather than of an emotional kind . This is far from saying that poetry has no concern with ideas . The greatest poetry is compact of ideas , but the ideas have ...
... imagination ; the pleasure of the reader is similarly of an intellectual rather than of an emotional kind . This is far from saying that poetry has no concern with ideas . The greatest poetry is compact of ideas , but the ideas have ...
Sida 268
... imagination is seen in the invention , the fertility in the fancy , and the accuracy in the expression . ' 99 Other important critical pronouncements of Dryden are Grounds of Criticism in Tragedy and the Preface to Fables , Ancient and ...
... imagination is seen in the invention , the fertility in the fancy , and the accuracy in the expression . ' 99 Other important critical pronouncements of Dryden are Grounds of Criticism in Tragedy and the Preface to Fables , Ancient and ...
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achieved aesthetic ancient artist ballads beauty Ben Jonson blank verse born Byron century characters Chaucer Chaucerian stanza chronicle play classical comedy contemporary conventional couplet criticism diction drama dramatist Dryden E. K. CHAMBERS early Elizabethan emotions England English poetry epic Essay Euphuistic example expression feeling French FURTHER READING genius Greek heroic heroic couplet human humour imagination influence Italian John John Dryden John Lydgate Jonson kind King language Latin lines literary lyrical manner medieval metre metrical Milton mind modern mood moral narrative nature novel novelist Oxford Univ passage pastoral pattern plays poem poet poetic Pope popular principle prose prosody Renaissance rhyme rhythm romantic romanticism satire Shakespeare social sonnet speech Spenser spirit Sprung Rhythm stage stanza story stress style SUGGESTIONS FOR FURTHER syllables T. S. Eliot taste Tennyson theatre theme Thomas thought tion tradition tragedy Victorian words Wordsworth writing written wrote