Joseph Addison as Literary CriticStanford University, 1950 - 474 sider |
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Side 18
... faults of the works and of their parts . Since the rules are not absolute , and since great beauties excuse faults , the critic's function becomes that of the tasteful observer in discovering beauties . Not only because the bulk of his ...
... faults of the works and of their parts . Since the rules are not absolute , and since great beauties excuse faults , the critic's function becomes that of the tasteful observer in discovering beauties . Not only because the bulk of his ...
Side 19
... faults . Typically , in his last paper on Paradise Lost , he says , " I might have enlarged the number [ of faults ] if I had been disposed to dwell on so ungrateful a subject . " 73 Addison's criticism of beauties and faults is ...
... faults . Typically , in his last paper on Paradise Lost , he says , " I might have enlarged the number [ of faults ] if I had been disposed to dwell on so ungrateful a subject . " 73 Addison's criticism of beauties and faults is ...
Side 20
... faults tradition , answered that if the works had faults , they also had beauties , and that the beauties far outweighed the faults . The neo - classical insistence that the poet govern his imagination with judgment and reason tended to ...
... faults tradition , answered that if the works had faults , they also had beauties , and that the beauties far outweighed the faults . The neo - classical insistence that the poet govern his imagination with judgment and reason tended to ...
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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