Joseph Addison as Literary CriticStanford University, 1950 - 474 sider |
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Side 25
... faculty of the soul , which dis- cerns the beauties of an Author with pleasure , and the imper- fections with dislike . " 103 This faculty is in part inborn , but in large measure must be cultivated . The critic must begin his criticism ...
... faculty of the soul , which dis- cerns the beauties of an Author with pleasure , and the imper- fections with dislike . " 103 This faculty is in part inborn , but in large measure must be cultivated . The critic must begin his criticism ...
Side 49
... faculty psychology , he defines it as " that faculty of the soul , which discerns the beauties of an Author with pleasure , and the imperfec- tions with dislike . " 179 We have already noted that for Addison the faculty is partly inborn ...
... faculty psychology , he defines it as " that faculty of the soul , which discerns the beauties of an Author with pleasure , and the imperfec- tions with dislike . " 179 We have already noted that for Addison the faculty is partly inborn ...
Side 169
... faculty . Sight furnishes it with ideas , either from visible objects in actual view or from representations of them in works of art ; " we cannot in- deed have a single image in the fancy that did not make its first entrance through ...
... faculty . Sight furnishes it with ideas , either from visible objects in actual view or from representations of them in works of art ; " we cannot in- deed have a single image in the fancy that did not make its first entrance through ...
Innhold
ADDISONS CRITICAL PRACTICE | 73 |
ADDISONS RELATIONSHIP TO CLASSICAL CRITICISM | 123 |
ADDISONS RELATIONSHIP TO SEVENTEENTHCENTURY | 161 |
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Addison writes Addison's critical Addison's theory Addison's treatment Aeneis aesthetics analysis ancients Answer to Davenant applies Aristotelian Aristotle Aristotle's attitude beauties beauties-and-faults belief Blackmore characters Chevy Chase cites compares concept consider critical theory deals Dennis Descartes dramatic Dryden effectiveness Eighteenth Century elements elevates emphasis England English criticism epic Essay faculty faculty psychology fancy faults French function genius and imagination Gondibert Gregory Smith History Hobbes Homer Horace Ibid images imitation of authors infra insists language Leviathan literary criticism literature Locke Locke's Longinus mind modern moral purpose nature neo-classical objects Ovid Paradise Lost passions perhaps philosophers pleasures and pains pleasures of imagination poem Poesy poet poetic justice poetry points Professor Hooker Professor Thorpe psychology purpose of art quotes readers rules Rymer sense sentiments Shakespeare Similarly soul Spectator 417 Spectator 70 Spingarn sublime supra taste Tatler Thomas Hobbes thought tion tradition tragedy Troilus and Cressida unity Virgil