Essays and Studies, Volumen18J. Murray, 1933 |
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Página 39
... individual by a work of art . It has developed its own technique and vocabulary for this purpose , and the statement of its results is disconcertingly abstruse to the lay man . Mr. I. A. Richards , for instance , in his illuminating ...
... individual by a work of art . It has developed its own technique and vocabulary for this purpose , and the statement of its results is disconcertingly abstruse to the lay man . Mr. I. A. Richards , for instance , in his illuminating ...
Página 61
... individuals who compose it . After half a century's work on the mob - mind psychologists are agreed that a crowd is an entirely different problem from an individual , that the indi- vidual in a crowd gains a feeling of excessive ...
... individuals who compose it . After half a century's work on the mob - mind psychologists are agreed that a crowd is an entirely different problem from an individual , that the indi- vidual in a crowd gains a feeling of excessive ...
Página 66
... individual . Amongst the fundamental ideas in the philosophy of Shakespeare is the contrast between the inner and the outer life . Applied to an individual this theory produces characters such as Lear , who , though outwardly majestic ...
... individual . Amongst the fundamental ideas in the philosophy of Shakespeare is the contrast between the inner and the outer life . Applied to an individual this theory produces characters such as Lear , who , though outwardly majestic ...
Contenido
KEATS AND POLITICS | 7 |
THE LIMITS OF LITERARY CRITICISM | 24 |
SHAKESPEARE AND THE PLEBS | 53 |
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Essays and Studies: Being Volume ... of the New Series of Essays and Studies ... English Association Vista de fragmentos - 1952 |
Essays and Studies: Being Volume ... of the New Series of Essays and Studies ... English Association Vista de fragmentos - 1951 |
Términos y frases comunes
Abbey appear attempts ballads beginning bibliography Biographical century characters Cole Cole's Coleridge contemporary copy Coriolanus correspondence Crotchet Castle Cymbeline Dalrymple Edinburgh Edith Nicolls Edom Elizabethan English examine Excursion fact feel fiction Genius give Grandfather Greek Gryll Grange Hamlet Headlong Hall Hogg I. A. Richards individual interest J. B. PRIESTLEY Keats Keats's L'Estrange's letter lines literary criticism literature living Lord lyric manuscript means Menenius merely method mind Napoleon Nature never Newton notes novelist novels Pantheism passage Paton Peacock Percy Percy's play plebs poet poetry political popular Prelude printed Professor published Reliques reply Scottish sense Shakespeare Shenstone soul speaking spirit stanzas suggested Thames things Thomas Love Peacock Thomas Warton Thos L'Estrange thought Tintern Abbey tion tragedy Troilus and Criseyde W. W. Greg words Wordsworth writing written wrote