Letters to X from H.J. MassinghamBooks for Libraries Press, 1967 - 298 páginas |
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Página 70
... style . ... " It is the highest degree unphilosophic , " said de Quincey , defining an aesthetic canon of Wordsworth's , " to call language or diction ' the dress of thoughts . ' He would call it the incarnation of thoughts . " " That ...
... style . ... " It is the highest degree unphilosophic , " said de Quincey , defining an aesthetic canon of Wordsworth's , " to call language or diction ' the dress of thoughts . ' He would call it the incarnation of thoughts . " " That ...
Página 71
... style to serve ulterior motives and interested ends . Style is not a derelict ship ; on the contrary it has been seized , torn from its moorings , and navigated by a horde of corsairs , plundering at will . This misappropriation of style ...
... style to serve ulterior motives and interested ends . Style is not a derelict ship ; on the contrary it has been seized , torn from its moorings , and navigated by a horde of corsairs , plundering at will . This misappropriation of style ...
Página 73
... style , which I have called the pseudo - romantic , is to swing the mind back upon the object . For in this abuse of style , as in other manifestations of false art , form is separated from ideas . More , the idea completely disappears ...
... style , which I have called the pseudo - romantic , is to swing the mind back upon the object . For in this abuse of style , as in other manifestations of false art , form is separated from ideas . More , the idea completely disappears ...
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achieve Addison appeal artist beauty become beginning cant century character classical common course created critic DEAR death edition Elizabethan English example experience expression eyes fact feeling folio forces future give hand head human idea imagination inspiration instance interest kind knowledge language learning leave less letters light lines literary literature live look manner material matter meaning method mind moral natural never novels objective once original partly passion past perhaps personality plays poems poetic poetry poets possessed present principles printed prose reader reason result reviewer satire satirist sense Shakespeare social sonnet soul spirit style suggest surely taste thing Thomas thou thought tion tradition translation true turn universal verse whole write written wrote