The English Poets: Lessing, Rousseau: EssaysKennikat Press, 1970 - 337 páginas |
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Página 130
... truth , a departure from which would shock too rudely our preconceived associations . I have seen an Indian chief in French boots , and he seemed to me almost tragic ; but , put upon the stage in tragedy , he would have been ludicrous ...
... truth , a departure from which would shock too rudely our preconceived associations . I have seen an Indian chief in French boots , and he seemed to me almost tragic ; but , put upon the stage in tragedy , he would have been ludicrous ...
Página 131
... truth , but may even be opposed to it . Anachron- isms and the like are in themselves of no account , and become important only when they make a gap too wide for our illusion to cross unconsciously , that is , when they are anacoluthons ...
... truth , but may even be opposed to it . Anachron- isms and the like are in themselves of no account , and become important only when they make a gap too wide for our illusion to cross unconsciously , that is , when they are anacoluthons ...
Página 309
... truth of which anyone is , or supposes himself to be , possessed , but the upright endeavour he has made to arrive at truth , makes the worth of the man . For not by the possession , but by the investigation , of truth are the powers ...
... truth of which anyone is , or supposes himself to be , possessed , but the upright endeavour he has made to arrive at truth , makes the worth of the man . For not by the possession , but by the investigation , of truth are the powers ...
Contenido
CONTENTS | 9 |
SPENSER II | 62 |
SHAKESPEARE ONCE MORE | 81 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Términos y frases comunes
æsthetic artist beauty become Ben Jonson biography blank-verse called certainly character Châteaubriand Chaucer Coleridge conscious criticism Dante delight divine doth doubt eclogue edition England example eyes Faery Queen fancy father feeling French genius German gives Goethe Grasmere Greek Hamlet heart Herr Stahr ideal imagination inspired instinct judgment Keats kind language Latin learned Lessing Lessing's letters literary literature living look Lord Lord Houghton Lyrical Ballads Macbeth Masson matter meaning metrist Milton mind modern moral nature never original Paradise Lost passage passion perhaps Petrarch phrase play poems poet poetic poetry prose rhyme Rousseau says seems sense sentiment Shakespeare sometimes soul speak Spenser style sure sweet syllable sympathy taste tells temperament thing thought tragedy translation true truth verse Voltaire whole William Wordsworth words Wordsworth writing written wrote