Criticism; the Foundations of Modern Literary JudgmentMark Schorer Harcourt, Brace, 1958 - 553 pages |
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Page 333
... poem . But I am bound to consider that any triteness which comes to mind with mention of the poem is a property of our own registration , and does not affect its freshness , which is perennial . The poem is young , brilliant ...
... poem . But I am bound to consider that any triteness which comes to mind with mention of the poem is a property of our own registration , and does not affect its freshness , which is perennial . The poem is young , brilliant ...
Page 372
... poem , to analyze " After the Burial , " by James Russell Lowell , a poem which is identical in situation . But in Lowell's poem the savagery of the irony is unqualified . In fact , the whole poem insists , quite literally , that ...
... poem , to analyze " After the Burial , " by James Russell Lowell , a poem which is identical in situation . But in Lowell's poem the savagery of the irony is unqualified . In fact , the whole poem insists , quite literally , that ...
Page 376
... poetic effect , or it may mean , though they do participate in the poetic effect , they need not appear in the poem in an explicit and argued form . And this second reading would scarcely be a doctrine of pure poetry at all , for it ...
... poetic effect , or it may mean , though they do participate in the poetic effect , they need not appear in the poem in an explicit and argued form . And this second reading would scarcely be a doctrine of pure poetry at all , for it ...
Contents
PLATO The Poet in the Republic | 1 |
LONGINUS On the Sublime | 10 |
THOMAS HOBBES Answer to Sir William Davenants | 25 |
Copyright | |
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action admiration Allen Tate ancient appear Aristotle artist beauty Ben Jonson called character classical comedy concrete universal conscious criticism delight divine drama effect English Epic poetry essay Euripides example experience expression fact feeling fiction Freud give Greek hath Hegel Henry James Homer human idea imagination imitation James kind language learning less literary literature living meaning ment metaphor metre Milton mind modern moral nature never novel objects Oedipus passion perhaps person philosophical Plato play pleasure plot poem Poesie poet poetic poetry present principle produced prose reader reason Restoration comedy rhyme romanticism scene seems sense sentiment Shakespeare sith Sophocles soul speak spirit stanza story style T. E. Hulme T. S. Eliot taste things thought tion Tiresias tragedy tragic true truth ture unity verse whole words writing