Countries of the Mind: Essays in Literary CriticismH. Milford, Oxford University Press, 1931 - 206 páginas |
Dentro del libro
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Página 27
... final judgement . That we should be enabled , through pure poetry , to receive a mental experience in its whole- ness and , as a necessary condition of this reception , to experience it anew is an indubitable good . We gain a positive ...
... final judgement . That we should be enabled , through pure poetry , to receive a mental experience in its whole- ness and , as a necessary condition of this reception , to experience it anew is an indubitable good . We gain a positive ...
Página 61
... final satisfaction . And to suppose it will gain substance by embracing a recondite philosophical no- tion of the ultimate convergence of Time and Eternity is an illusion . The anguish of the temporal will not be assuaged either in the ...
... final satisfaction . And to suppose it will gain substance by embracing a recondite philosophical no- tion of the ultimate convergence of Time and Eternity is an illusion . The anguish of the temporal will not be assuaged either in the ...
Página 114
... final fashioning was preponderant . Whether that final fashioning was a mere touching - up or a complete rewriting of other men's work , or a new and independent creation , is for the critic to decide . Whether , having decided , he can ...
... final fashioning was preponderant . Whether that final fashioning was a mere touching - up or a complete rewriting of other men's work , or a new and independent creation , is for the critic to decide . Whether , having decided , he can ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Countries of the Mind: Essays in Literary Criticism. 2d Ser John Middleton Murry Vista completa - 1922 |
Countries of the Mind: Essays in Literary Criticism, Volumen1 John Middleton Murry Vista completa - 1924 |
Términos y frases comunes
admire Anne Finch Antony Antony and Cleopatra Aristotle Bagehot beauty become believe Bossuet Bremond Caesar called Christian Cleopatra Coleridge Coleridge's consciousness Countess of Winchilsea Crabb Robinson creative criticism death doubt Emily Brontë emotional field English essay evidence experience eyes fact faith Finch Flatman genius give Godwin Goethe heart human ideal imagery imagination intellectual intuition Keats kind language less Lessing's lines living Lover's Complaint Lucretius Mary Wollstonecraft means metaphor mind moral mystical nature never North orthodoxy Pantheism passion perfect perhaps philosophic poetry Plutarch poem poet poet's poetic praise precisely prose pure poetry reality reason religion religious Robertson seems sense Shake Shakespeare Shelley simile simple Sir Henry Newbolt soul speare's Spenser spirit thee thing THOMAS FLATMAN thou thought tion true truth understand universal Venus and Adonis verse William Godwin word dedicate Wordsworth write wrote young