Selected Criticism, 1916-1957 |
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Page 107
... actual achievement ; but because I wish to show that Keats was greater , far greater , than his actual achievement , because I wish to present him as the perfect type of the great poet , as a poetic genius second only to Shakespeare in ...
... actual achievement ; but because I wish to show that Keats was greater , far greater , than his actual achievement , because I wish to present him as the perfect type of the great poet , as a poetic genius second only to Shakespeare in ...
Page 111
... actual life - experience . At this very moment , when he was proclaiming the principle of beauty thus absolutely , pain had approached him : he was condemned to watch his brother die . He knew that in his actual life he was to be called ...
... actual life - experience . At this very moment , when he was proclaiming the principle of beauty thus absolutely , pain had approached him : he was condemned to watch his brother die . He knew that in his actual life he was to be called ...
Page 139
... actual poetical achievement is the Hyperion , in which the conflict between the Miltonic ideal and Wordsworthian necessity is apparent ; The Eve of St. Agnes , in which there is a momentary and perfect fusion between the objective bent ...
... actual poetical achievement is the Hyperion , in which the conflict between the Miltonic ideal and Wordsworthian necessity is apparent ; The Eve of St. Agnes , in which there is a momentary and perfect fusion between the objective bent ...
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Common terms and phrases
accept achievement æsthetic Aristotle artist attitude become believe called Christian Coleridge condition conscious creative criticism D. H. Lawrence Democracy divine dream Eliot Emily Brontë emotion English existence experience expression fact Falstaff feel genius Goethe Goethe's harmony Hazlitt heart human Hyperion idea ideal imagination individual instinctive intellectual intuition Keats Keats's kind King King Lear knowledge Lawrence Lawrence's less letter literary literature living Marxism means Merchant of Venice merely metaphor Milton mind modern Molière moral Murry mystery nature necessary never passion perhaps philosopher poem poet poetic poetry principle of beauty prophetic prose Raskolnikov reality reason religion religious revealed Rousseau seems sense Shakespeare Shylock simple social social contract society soul Spenser Spinoza spirit Stendhal Svidrigailov T. S. Eliot Tchehov things thought tion to-day Tolstoy tragedy true truth unconscious understand universe vision Whitman whole word Wordsworth writing wrote