Letters to X from H.J. MassinghamBooks for Libraries Press, 1967 - 298 páginas |
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Página 103
... language ( speech , as it were , in a dressing - gown ) falls away into a looseness and waste that the widest and most generous canons of art cannot admit . Hardy , of course , uses something of the same method , but hardly ever without ...
... language ( speech , as it were , in a dressing - gown ) falls away into a looseness and waste that the widest and most generous canons of art cannot admit . Hardy , of course , uses something of the same method , but hardly ever without ...
Página 166
... language at the beginning of the seventeenth century was at its maturest development , highly cultivated and yet free on the other hand from the cliché of eld and over- practice , and on the other from the necessary but waste- ful and ...
... language at the beginning of the seventeenth century was at its maturest development , highly cultivated and yet free on the other hand from the cliché of eld and over- practice , and on the other from the necessary but waste- ful and ...
Página 183
... language by speaking of tears as " walking baths , compendious oceans . " When he strains or perverts a figure it is not out of wantonness , but because his painfully struggling idea can only grope a contorted way to life . It is ...
... language by speaking of tears as " walking baths , compendious oceans . " When he strains or perverts a figure it is not out of wantonness , but because his painfully struggling idea can only grope a contorted way to life . It is ...
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Términos y frases comunes
achieve Addison æsthetic amateur artist beauty Ben Jonson bookseller cant classical contemporary course Crashaw critic DEAR DEAR X divine Don Quixote Donne Drummond Dürer edition eighteenth century Elizabethan English example expression eyes feeling folio free verse Gabriel Harvey genius give Grape-nuts hand hath heaven Henry Henry James human idea imagination Imagists inspiration interest Jonson kind Lamb less letters literary tradition literature live material meaning metaphysical method Michael Field mind modern moral Mount Helicon natural never novelists novels partly passion past personality phrase plays poetic poetry poets possessed prefatory poem present prose pseudo-picturesque Ralph Hodgson reader realistic reviewer rhyme romantic satire satirist sense Shakespeare sonnet soul spirit style surely taste thee thing Thomas Thomas Coryate thou thought tion translation Vaughan W. H. Davies whole words write wrote