Letters to XConstable, 1919 - 298 páginas |
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Página 36
... appeal to the greatest number , too many publishers ( there are , happily , a few exceptions ) , to swell their sales , contract for the one rather than the other . Yes , I know what you will be thinking about this letter . Such are the ...
... appeal to the greatest number , too many publishers ( there are , happily , a few exceptions ) , to swell their sales , contract for the one rather than the other . Yes , I know what you will be thinking about this letter . Such are the ...
Página 39
... appealing to " the plain man " and " the man in the street " ( in the most ambiguous logic ! ) , and above all the destructive tyranny of its advertisements are an unqualified evil . I am not merely puffing dogmas into the air . The ...
... appealing to " the plain man " and " the man in the street " ( in the most ambiguous logic ! ) , and above all the destructive tyranny of its advertisements are an unqualified evil . I am not merely puffing dogmas into the air . The ...
Página 48
... ; the literary prose tendencies of the seventeenth century were too confused and disrupted , too mutilated by the Civil War , to admit of a consistent , unequivocal appeal ; the isolated poets , essayists and thinkers 48 LETTERS TO X.
... ; the literary prose tendencies of the seventeenth century were too confused and disrupted , too mutilated by the Civil War , to admit of a consistent , unequivocal appeal ; the isolated poets , essayists and thinkers 48 LETTERS TO X.
Página 49
Harold John Massingham. unequivocal appeal ; the isolated poets , essayists and thinkers of the Romantic Revival wrote for individuals and not a public , however select . Our own society is too vast , too amorphous , too fortuitous , yes ...
Harold John Massingham. unequivocal appeal ; the isolated poets , essayists and thinkers of the Romantic Revival wrote for individuals and not a public , however select . Our own society is too vast , too amorphous , too fortuitous , yes ...
Página 71
... appeal . To that end this misuse of style employs every figure that will serve to keep the feelings divorced from the intellect . Pleo- nasm , the reduplication of selected epithets , hyperbole , exclamation , and the use of abstract ...
... appeal . To that end this misuse of style employs every figure that will serve to keep the feelings divorced from the intellect . Pleo- nasm , the reduplication of selected epithets , hyperbole , exclamation , and the use of abstract ...
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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