Essays by Divers Hands: Being the Transactions of the Royal Society of Literature of the United KingdomH. Mulford, Oxford University Press, 1977 - English literature |
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Page 100
... T. S. Eliot against him : It is at least more nearly possible to distinguish the pleasure which arises from the noise , from the pleasure due to other elements , than with the verse of Shakespeare , in which the auditory imagina- tion ...
... T. S. Eliot against him : It is at least more nearly possible to distinguish the pleasure which arises from the noise , from the pleasure due to other elements , than with the verse of Shakespeare , in which the auditory imagina- tion ...
Page 102
... T. S. Eliot would not be justified in deploring the sound- effect of Milton's rhymes here as mere ' noise ' ; and yet Eliot's own poetry does show us what kind of greatness he himself was nobly desirous of . Put Milton's rhyming of ...
... T. S. Eliot would not be justified in deploring the sound- effect of Milton's rhymes here as mere ' noise ' ; and yet Eliot's own poetry does show us what kind of greatness he himself was nobly desirous of . Put Milton's rhyming of ...
Page 108
... T. S. Eliot , a poet who in both senses makes much of nerves . Contrast the soothing truth of Milton : To resalute the World with sacred Light ( xi . 134 ) appeal to Memory and Hope . ' Yet the memory 108 SOUND AND SENSE IN PARADISE LOST.
... T. S. Eliot , a poet who in both senses makes much of nerves . Contrast the soothing truth of Milton : To resalute the World with sacred Light ( xi . 134 ) appeal to Memory and Hope . ' Yet the memory 108 SOUND AND SENSE IN PARADISE LOST.
Contents
The Wedmore Memorial Lecture 1975 | 24 |
Don Carlos Coloma Memorial Lecture 1974 | 47 |
The Giff Edmonds Memorial Lecture 1975 | 57 |
Copyright | |
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