Essay on CriticismUniversity Press, 1908 - 170 من الصفحات |
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الصفحة 4
... imagination , -a mere poetical ' Mrs Harris ' ! But Cowley shall speak for himself . This is how he sings ' of Anacreon , continuing a lover in his old age ' : — ' Love was with thy life entwined , Close as heat with fire is join'd ; A ...
... imagination , -a mere poetical ' Mrs Harris ' ! But Cowley shall speak for himself . This is how he sings ' of Anacreon , continuing a lover in his old age ' : — ' Love was with thy life entwined , Close as heat with fire is join'd ; A ...
الصفحة 5
... imagination nothing more picturesque than a prosaic metaphor borrowed from an attorney's office : - : - ' As an obstructed fountain's head Cuts the entail off from the streams , And brooks are disinherited . ' Once more , Lovelace , in ...
... imagination nothing more picturesque than a prosaic metaphor borrowed from an attorney's office : - : - ' As an obstructed fountain's head Cuts the entail off from the streams , And brooks are disinherited . ' Once more , Lovelace , in ...
الصفحة 9
... imagination ; but because his imagination was not his pre- dominant talent ? ' In the Dedication of his treatise Warton says , ' The sublime and the pathetic are the two chief nerves of all genuine poesy . What is there transcendently ...
... imagination ; but because his imagination was not his pre- dominant talent ? ' In the Dedication of his treatise Warton says , ' The sublime and the pathetic are the two chief nerves of all genuine poesy . What is there transcendently ...
الصفحة 13
... imagination to the help of reason , ' he frames a definition which would include the showman's art in managing a magic - lantern as well as Milton's art in writing Paradise Lost . Few attempts at defining poetry however are so sane as ...
... imagination to the help of reason , ' he frames a definition which would include the showman's art in managing a magic - lantern as well as Milton's art in writing Paradise Lost . Few attempts at defining poetry however are so sane as ...
الصفحة 14
... imaginative faculty1 . ' To sum up , we may say that poetry requires— ( 1 ) Imagination , whereby the phenomena of nature and of human life may be at the same time imitated and idealized ; ( 2 ) An aptitude for stirring emotion in the ...
... imaginative faculty1 . ' To sum up , we may say that poetry requires— ( 1 ) Imagination , whereby the phenomena of nature and of human life may be at the same time imitated and idealized ; ( 2 ) An aptitude for stirring emotion in the ...
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Absalom and Achitophel accent Addison admire Æneid Alexandrine alliteration ancient artistic Ben Jonson Boileau caesura called censure century classical conceit contains correctness couplet Cowley Denham denotes didactic Dryden Duke dull Dunciad emotion Essay on Criticism ev'ry excellent expression fame fancy faults fools genius grace Greek hence Homer Horace imagination imitation Johnson judge judgment King language Latin learn'd learning lines literary literature Longinus Lord Matthew Arnold meaning meant merit metre mind Mount Helicon Muse Nature ne'er numbers o'er open vowels passage pause Peter Lombard poem poet's poetic poetry poets Pope Pope's praise precepts prose reader reign remarks rhymes Rome Roscommon rules Sainte Beuve Satire says sense Shakespeare signifies song speaks spirit style syllables taste things thought Timotheus tion Triplet true truth verse versification Virgil Waller Walsh Warton word write written wrote