Letters to XConstable, 1919 - 298 páginas |
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Página 61
... classical learning ) , but accepts these tributes of ridicule with the most elegant and formal seriousness . That might be part of the joke , but Coryat had an excellent conceit of his book , as indeed its lively and methodical ...
... classical learning ) , but accepts these tributes of ridicule with the most elegant and formal seriousness . That might be part of the joke , but Coryat had an excellent conceit of his book , as indeed its lively and methodical ...
Página 70
... classical style to embody a romantic inspiration ; Byron , on the other hand , wrote undiluted romance with a polemical ideal of the eighteenth century in his mind . The fact is that it is futile not only to isolate style and to ...
... classical style to embody a romantic inspiration ; Byron , on the other hand , wrote undiluted romance with a polemical ideal of the eighteenth century in his mind . The fact is that it is futile not only to isolate style and to ...
Página 73
... classical rather than a romantic style is what is needed ? Whatever our respect for tradition we cannot possibly return , without loss of vitality , either to the utilitarian classicism of the Romans , the naïve classicism of the Middle ...
... classical rather than a romantic style is what is needed ? Whatever our respect for tradition we cannot possibly return , without loss of vitality , either to the utilitarian classicism of the Romans , the naïve classicism of the Middle ...
Página 75
... classical , because all great literature has form . For form , in its most ample sense , means the complete fulfilment of an artistic pur- pose , not so much as the artist , but as God intended it . There are five essentials which are ...
... classical , because all great literature has form . For form , in its most ample sense , means the complete fulfilment of an artistic pur- pose , not so much as the artist , but as God intended it . There are five essentials which are ...
Página 76
... classical " then , not in the sense of form , but as an image in little of it . Form is an ideal which may or may not be won ; the classical certainty admits of practical achievement . Take these five qualities of art I mentioned . A ...
... classical " then , not in the sense of form , but as an image in little of it . Form is an ideal which may or may not be won ; the classical certainty admits of practical achievement . Take these five qualities of art I mentioned . A ...
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Términos y frases comunes
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