Literary Criticism in England, 1660-1800Gerald Wester Chapman Knopf, 1966 - 618 pàgines |
Des de l'interior del llibre
Resultats 1 - 3 de 78.
Pàgina 144
... producing terror contribute extremely to the sublime . All the examples that Longinus brings of the loftiness of the ... produce terror are necessarily accompanied with admiration ( because everything that is terrible is great to him to ...
... producing terror contribute extremely to the sublime . All the examples that Longinus brings of the loftiness of the ... produce terror are necessarily accompanied with admiration ( because everything that is terrible is great to him to ...
Pàgina 271
... produce good order , are at the same time repressive , prosaic , hostile to the highest poetry , as Shaftesbury had noted . * Blackwell hedges few implications , and later critics worked out still others . If poetry is " produced " by ...
... produce good order , are at the same time repressive , prosaic , hostile to the highest poetry , as Shaftesbury had noted . * Blackwell hedges few implications , and later critics worked out still others . If poetry is " produced " by ...
Pàgina 536
... produce no crop , or only one , unless it be continually fertilized and enriched with foreign matter . When we have had continually before us the great works of art , to impregnate our minds with kindred ideas , we are then , and not ...
... produce no crop , or only one , unless it be continually fertilized and enriched with foreign matter . When we have had continually before us the great works of art , to impregnate our minds with kindred ideas , we are then , and not ...
Continguts
INTRODUCTION | 3 |
John Locke | 29 |
JOHN DRYDEN 16311700 | 37 |
Copyright | |
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action Addison admiration Aeneid ancient appear Aristotle audience beauty Ben Jonson called character comedy common composition criticism delight discourse dramatic Dryden effect eighteenth century English epic epic poetry Essay Essay on Criticism excellence expression Falstaff fancy Francis Hutcheson French genius give Gondibert heroic Hobbes Homer Horace Hudibras human humor ideas Iliad images imagination imitation Johnson Joseph Warton judge judgment Juvenal kind language laughter learning living mankind manner means Milton mind modern moral nation nature neoclassic neoclassicism never numbers objects observed opinion original Ovid painting Paradise Lost particular passions perfect perhaps persons philosophers play pleased pleasure poem poesy poet poetical poetry Pope principles produce reader reason resemblance rhyme ridiculous rules satire scenes sense sentiments Shakespeare Silent Woman sometimes spirit sublime taste theory things thought tion tragedy true truth verse Virgil virtue words writing