Letters to XConstable, 1919 - 298 páginas |
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Harold John Massingham. MY DEAR X , II SATIRE ( 1 ) You would perhaps agree with me that the surest way of realizing what satire is would be to take a mental card - index of the satirists . Drum them over in your head - Lucian , Voltaire ...
Harold John Massingham. MY DEAR X , II SATIRE ( 1 ) You would perhaps agree with me that the surest way of realizing what satire is would be to take a mental card - index of the satirists . Drum them over in your head - Lucian , Voltaire ...
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... to a set piece . Loosely defined , it is an artistic prompting , unable to gratify itself on account of its contact with the foes of beauty . The satirist's idea of beauty is so tremendous ( and perhaps so impossible IO LETTERS TO X.
... to a set piece . Loosely defined , it is an artistic prompting , unable to gratify itself on account of its contact with the foes of beauty . The satirist's idea of beauty is so tremendous ( and perhaps so impossible IO LETTERS TO X.
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Harold John Massingham. of beauty is so tremendous ( and perhaps so impossible of achievement ) that he has to remove mountains of en- cumbrances before his faith can become operative . More substantially it is Man's doubtful spirit ...
Harold John Massingham. of beauty is so tremendous ( and perhaps so impossible of achievement ) that he has to remove mountains of en- cumbrances before his faith can become operative . More substantially it is Man's doubtful spirit ...
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... perhaps suggest the other . A partial excuse is that satire and its relations with literary and social changes are , like yourself , terra incognita . Obviously the genuine satirist is an idealist , to be moved only indirectly by ...
... perhaps suggest the other . A partial excuse is that satire and its relations with literary and social changes are , like yourself , terra incognita . Obviously the genuine satirist is an idealist , to be moved only indirectly by ...
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... Perhaps the explanation is that the period parodies and caricatures itself so out- rageously that nothing is left for the satirist to do . If you , he addresses the public , haven't a ghost of a notion what an exhibition of themselves ...
... Perhaps the explanation is that the period parodies and caricatures itself so out- rageously that nothing is left for the satirist to do . If you , he addresses the public , haven't a ghost of a notion what an exhibition of themselves ...
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achieved Addison æsthetic amateur artist beauty Ben Jonson bookseller cant classical contemporary course critic Davies DEAR DEAR X divine Don Quixote Donne doth edition eighteenth century Elizabethan English Euphuism example expression eyes feeling Flecker folio free verse Gabriel Harvey genius give hand hath heaven Henry James human idea imagination Imagists inspiration James Mabbe Jonson kind Lamb less letters Lillo literary tradition literature live look material meaning metaphysic method metre Michael Field mind modern moral natural never novelists novels Parnassian partly passion personality phrase plays poet poetic poetry possessed prefatory poem present prose pseudo-picturesque Ralph Hodgson reader realistic rhyme romantic satire satirist sense Shakespeare sonnet soul spirit style surely taste thee thing Thomas Thomas Coryate thou thought tion to-day translation Vaughan W. H. Davies whole words write wrote