Literary Criticism: A Short History, Volum 10Knopf, 1957 - 755 sider Traces literary criticism from its classical origins up to the present. |
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Side 116
... beauty , Ennead , I , vi , strongly inclined , like his master Plato , to de- preciate physical beauty , or at best to value it as an approach to the real beauty of intelligence in the Yonder . He that has the strength , let him arise ...
... beauty , Ennead , I , vi , strongly inclined , like his master Plato , to de- preciate physical beauty , or at best to value it as an approach to the real beauty of intelligence in the Yonder . He that has the strength , let him arise ...
Side 119
... beauty ? Think , says Plotinus , what that doctrine leads us to . Only a compound can be beautiful , never anything devoid of parts ; and only a whole ; the several parts will have beauty , not in themselves , but only as working ...
... beauty ? Think , says Plotinus , what that doctrine leads us to . Only a compound can be beautiful , never anything devoid of parts ; and only a whole ; the several parts will have beauty , not in themselves , but only as working ...
Side 372
... fuse with beauty , ' and beauty might be com- bined with perfect natural forms and purposive human artifacts ( the good , the ideal ) , but in neither of these cases was beauty pure . Beauty allied to the good was not " free beauty ...
... fuse with beauty , ' and beauty might be com- bined with perfect natural forms and purposive human artifacts ( the good , the ideal ) , but in neither of these cases was beauty pure . Beauty allied to the good was not " free beauty ...
Innhold
Socrates and the Rhapsode PAGE | 3 |
Poetry as Structure | 21 |
Tragedy and Comedy | 35 |
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18th century aesthetic ancient appears argument Aristotelian Aristotle Aristotle's Arnold artist beauty Chapter character classical Coleridge comedy comic concept Croce doctrine dramatic Dryden Eliot emotion English Essay ethical expression fact feeling French genres Greek hamartia Homer Horace human I. A. Richards ideal ideas imagination imitation instance Isocrates Johnson kind language less literary criticism literary theory literature London Longinus lyric meaning metaphor metaphysical mind modern moral myth nature neo-classic neo-Platonic norm object passage passion perhaps peripeteia Phaedrus philosophy phrase Plato pleasure Plotinus poem Poesy poet poet's poetry Pope principle prose Quintilian quoted reader reality René Wellek rhetoric Richards romantic Samuel Johnson satire sense Shakespeare Socrates soul spirit style sublime symbolic symbolist T. S. Eliot term theorist theory things thought tion tragedy translation truth unity universal verbal verse W. B. Yeats whole words Wordsworth writing Yeats York