The Making of Literature: Some Principles of Criticism Examined in the Light of Ancient and Modern Theory |
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Page 35
... poetry ? Euripides himself had been to school with the sophists . He became a Modernist among poets . He thought that poetry should deal with the burning problems of contemporary life . He was the feminist of his time , believing in the ...
... poetry ? Euripides himself had been to school with the sophists . He became a Modernist among poets . He thought that poetry should deal with the burning problems of contemporary life . He was the feminist of his time , believing in the ...
Page 212
... poetry , or is it a defect in Shelley's way of going to work ? Is it not possible that he has neglected some part of his proper task ? He has himself provided the answer . It is when he echoes the views of Wordsworth , that poetry is ...
... poetry , or is it a defect in Shelley's way of going to work ? Is it not possible that he has neglected some part of his proper task ? He has himself provided the answer . It is when he echoes the views of Wordsworth , that poetry is ...
Page 226
... poet , and his work the title of poem . To define this activity is to lay down a first principle of poetry . Starting , then , from the broadest possible conception of poetry , as the " regulative idea of all the Fine Arts , " he ...
... poet , and his work the title of poem . To define this activity is to lay down a first principle of poetry . Starting , then , from the broadest possible conception of poetry , as the " regulative idea of all the Fine Arts , " he ...
Contents
Contents CHAPTER PAGE I THE LIGHT FROM HEAVEN II | 11 |
THE FIRST CRITIC | 16 |
THE LITERATURE OF POWER | 22 |
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action admiration Æschylus æsthetic ancient appears Aristophanes Aristotle Arnold artist beauty Ben Jonson Boileau century character classical Coleridge creative critic Croce culture Dante delight Demosthenes didactic divine doctrine drama Dryden E. M. Forster elements emotions essential Euripides excellence experience expression fact faculty feeling genius gives Goethe Greek Hesiod Homer human ideal ideas imagination imitation impressions inspired intellectual intuition Jonson judgment kind language Laocoon less literary literature living Longinus matter Matthew Arnold mean metaphysical method mind modern moral nature never novel novelist object painter painting passion Pater personality philosopher picture Plato play pleasure plot Plotinus poem poet poet's poetic poetry principles prose Quintilian reality reason romantic romanticism Sainte-Beuve sculptor sense Shakespeare Sophocles soul speak spirit style sublime task taste theme theory thing thought tragedy tragic true truth unity verse vision Walter Pater whole words Wordsworth writing