Essays on Literature and IdeasMacmillan, 1963 - 270 sider |
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Side 56
... Shakespeare as having a ' second - rate mind ' . Challenged to say more precisely what he meant , he obliged in a letter to The Times Literary Supplement . Shakespeare ( he explained ) had a great sensibility ; he was a great poet ; but ...
... Shakespeare as having a ' second - rate mind ' . Challenged to say more precisely what he meant , he obliged in a letter to The Times Literary Supplement . Shakespeare ( he explained ) had a great sensibility ; he was a great poet ; but ...
Side 59
... Shakespeare is , clearly , nothing less than a revolution . It means that at last we can heed what Shakespeare is telling us . Instead of concentrating our entire energy on irrelevances ( from character - study to source- hunting ) we ...
... Shakespeare is , clearly , nothing less than a revolution . It means that at last we can heed what Shakespeare is telling us . Instead of concentrating our entire energy on irrelevances ( from character - study to source- hunting ) we ...
Side 64
... Shakespeare seems more logical , less full of frills and incon- sistencies : in a word , better art . The repetition of the theme from plot to sub - plot , which once seemed justifiable mainly as a decoration ( so that Watts - Dunton ...
... Shakespeare seems more logical , less full of frills and incon- sistencies : in a word , better art . The repetition of the theme from plot to sub - plot , which once seemed justifiable mainly as a decoration ( so that Watts - Dunton ...
Innhold
The Mind of Shakespeare | 56 |
An Introduction to Pope | 71 |
the Search for Identity | 85 |
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artist attitude audience become Blackmur Byron character Christian cinema civilisation Clennam Communist Connolly course culture Cyril Connolly Dickens drama Dunciad Edmund Wilson Eliot emotional Enemies of Promise England English essay everything fact feel fiction George Orwell Gerard Manley Hopkins hand Harold Pinter Hopkins Hopkins's human idea idiom imagination Indian inscape instance intellectual interest jazz John Wain Johnson journalist kind language literary criticism literature Little Dorrit living look magic Marshalsea matter means ment Merdle merely mind modern nature never novel novelist obvious once Orwell Orwell's play poem poet poetic poetry political Pope prison prose R. P. Blackmur reader realistic reason Roman S. J. Perelman satire seems sense Shakespeare simple social society Soviet story symbolism T. S. Eliot theatre thing tion tradition verse whole words writing wrote young