The Works of the English Poets: PopeH. Hughs, 1779 - English poetry |
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John Constable. Contents. Introduction: I. A. Richards and his Critics Acknowledgments I. A. Richards and his Critics 1. Edward Sapir, 'An Approach to Symbolism' 1 (Aug. 1923) 2. F. P. Ramsey, Review of The Meaning of Meaning (Jan. 1924) ...
John Constable. Contents. Introduction: I. A. Richards and his Critics Acknowledgments I. A. Richards and his Critics 1. Edward Sapir, 'An Approach to Symbolism' 1 (Aug. 1923) 2. F. P. Ramsey, Review of The Meaning of Meaning (Jan. 1924) ...
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... critics from the time of Dryden through the late Romantic movement . I have undertaken to determine what have been the individual attitudes of these critics toward Racine and to find the points of common agreement among them . In ...
... critics from the time of Dryden through the late Romantic movement . I have undertaken to determine what have been the individual attitudes of these critics toward Racine and to find the points of common agreement among them . In ...
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... critics, the reader will not find a strictly chronological narrative here; instead, each chapter has been conceived of as a window opening onto the life and writings of one, or two, or three critics, without losing sight of the broader ...
... critics, the reader will not find a strictly chronological narrative here; instead, each chapter has been conceived of as a window opening onto the life and writings of one, or two, or three critics, without losing sight of the broader ...
Page 98
... critics ' objection to the hazy vagueness of the majority of his poems.11 But his own theory offers no excuse for the monotony of his verse . If it reminds the poet and some of his readers of the roll of ocean waves , we have to ask the ...
... critics ' objection to the hazy vagueness of the majority of his poems.11 But his own theory offers no excuse for the monotony of his verse . If it reminds the poet and some of his readers of the roll of ocean waves , we have to ask the ...
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... criticism . To recur to an example very recently suggested : supposing , in the twenty - second cen- tury , a body of comparative critics should be given the official report of the Berlin Conference and the speeches of Lord Beaconsfield ...
... criticism . To recur to an example very recently suggested : supposing , in the twenty - second cen- tury , a body of comparative critics should be given the official report of the Berlin Conference and the speeches of Lord Beaconsfield ...
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Popular passages
Page 212 - The moon-struck prophet felt the madding hour : Then rose the seed of Chaos, and of Night, To blot out order, and extinguish light, Of dull and venal a new world to mould, And bring Saturnian days of lead and gold.
Page 269 - ... what contemptible men were the authors of it. He was not without hopes that, by manifesting the...
Page 223 - When Reason doubtful, like the Samian letter, Points him two ways, the narrower is the better. Plac'd at the door of Learning, youth to guide, We never suffer it to stand too wide. To ask, to guess, to know, as they commence...
Page 84 - There motley Images her fancy strike, Figures ill pair'd, and Similies unlike. She sees a Mob of Metaphors advance, Pleas'd with the madness of the mazy dance: How Tragedy and Comedy embrace; How Farce and Epic get a jumbled race; How Time himself stands still at her command, Realms shift their place, and Ocean turns to land.
Page 203 - The person who acted Polly, till then obscure, became all at Once the favourite of the town; her pictures were engraved, and sold in great numbers; her life written, books of letters and...
Page 24 - Poetry, he will find but few precepts in it which he may not meet with in Aristotle, and which were not commonly known by all the poets of the Augustan age. His way of expressing and applying them, not his invention of them, is what we are chiefly to admire.
Page 223 - As fancy opens the quick springs of sense, We ply the memory, we load the brain, Bind rebel wit, and double chain on chain, Confine the thought, to exercise the breath, And keep them in the pale of words till death.
Page 232 - Full in the midst of Euclid dip at once, And petrify a genius to a dunce ; Or, set on metaphysic ground to prance, Show all his paces, not a step advance.
Page 203 - Furthermore, it drove out of England (for that season) the Italian Opera, which had carried all before it for ten years.
Page 24 - ... mankind in more strong, more beautiful, or more uncommon lights. If a reader examines Horace's Art of Poetry, he will find but few precepts in it which...