The Uses of Division: Unity and Disharmony in LiteratureChatto and Windus, 1976 - 248 oldal |
Részletek a könyvből
1 - 3 találat összesen 86 találatból.
122. oldal
... feel existence and to show How quiet death is . The passage rises into a greatness of generality and at once presses onward ; while the opening of the second Hyperion seems to be feeling its way , forward towards the plotted moment of a ...
... feel existence and to show How quiet death is . The passage rises into a greatness of generality and at once presses onward ; while the opening of the second Hyperion seems to be feeling its way , forward towards the plotted moment of a ...
143. oldal
... feel about the second Hyperion . It is a doubt which I hope takes the form of humility , and in conclusion I should like to suggest that our most disturbing apprehension of greatness in Keats ( and , as an illuminating parallel , in ...
... feel about the second Hyperion . It is a doubt which I hope takes the form of humility , and in conclusion I should like to suggest that our most disturbing apprehension of greatness in Keats ( and , as an illuminating parallel , in ...
233. oldal
... feel the impact of it most , an impact that Shakespeare must certainly have intended ; and what we feel is a dramatic poetry akin to opera , to music , to a shattering display of natural forces . If we cannot feel this intoxication , or ...
... feel the impact of it most , an impact that Shakespeare must certainly have intended ; and what we feel is a dramatic poetry akin to opera , to music , to a shattering display of natural forces . If we cannot feel this intoxication , or ...
Más kiadások - Összes megtekintése
Gyakori szavak és kifejezések
achievement aesthetic Antony artist awareness becomes Byron called certainly character comedy consciousness contrast Coriolanus Cressida critics D. H. Lawrence daemon Dickens Dickens's dramatic dream Dream Songs effect embarrassment Endymion Eve of St experience fact fantasy feel fiction Forster genius gives hero Howards End human humour Hyperion idea imagination impression intention Isabella Jane Austen Keats Keats's poetry Keatsian kind Kipling Kipling's Larkin Larkinian Lawrence Lawrence's Leavis less literary Little Dorrit living Lowell and Berryman Macbeth Mary Postgate meaning moral nature never novel novelist Othello passion perhaps Philip Larkin play poem poet poetic Q. D. Leavis reader reality relation reveal Ricks romantic seems sense sexual Shakespeare Shestov social society St Agnes story suggest T. S. Eliot tale things Tolstoy Tolstoy's Troilus true truth vision vulgarity wholly Women in Love words Wordsworth write Yeats young
Hivatkozások erre a könyvre
Shakespeare and the Uses of Antiquity: An Introductory Essay Charles Martindale Nincs elérhető előnézet - 1994 |
Real Toads in Imaginary Gardens: Narrative Accounts of Liberalism Maureen Whitebrook Korlátozott előnézet - 1995 |