Lamb's Criticism: A Selection from the Literary Criticism of Charles LambThe University Press, 1923 - 114 Seiten |
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Seite viii
... kind that it is now the fashion to call creative . But there is far more danger inherent in the creative than in the everyday kind ; not when the result is inartistic , for then the failure is obvious , but when the critic reads himself ...
... kind that it is now the fashion to call creative . But there is far more danger inherent in the creative than in the everyday kind ; not when the result is inartistic , for then the failure is obvious , but when the critic reads himself ...
Seite ix
... kind of critic other than the creative , the claim would be preposterous . But the fact is that the bulk of criticism that is both a high work of art in itself and tells the truth about what it deals with is remarkably small and ...
... kind of critic other than the creative , the claim would be preposterous . But the fact is that the bulk of criticism that is both a high work of art in itself and tells the truth about what it deals with is remarkably small and ...
Seite x
... Sidney , something quite irreplaceable . If asked for my reasons I could only say that the sentence , ' Sidney did not find a homely poetic imagery the most natural for expressing the kind of passion he felt X INTRODUCTION.
... Sidney , something quite irreplaceable . If asked for my reasons I could only say that the sentence , ' Sidney did not find a homely poetic imagery the most natural for expressing the kind of passion he felt X INTRODUCTION.
Seite xi
... kind of passion he felt , ' al- though giving the same ' thought ' as Lamb's sentence , is not in the least indispensable , or quote Professor Saintsbury to the effect that ' in no critic perhaps not even in Mr Pater- does style count ...
... kind of passion he felt , ' al- though giving the same ' thought ' as Lamb's sentence , is not in the least indispensable , or quote Professor Saintsbury to the effect that ' in no critic perhaps not even in Mr Pater- does style count ...
Seite 7
... kind ( as he confesses to be true of the romance ) may be ' full of worth and wit . ' They savour of the Courtier , it must be allowed , and not of the Commonwealthsman . But Milton was a Courtier when he wrote the Masque at Ludlow ...
... kind ( as he confesses to be true of the romance ) may be ' full of worth and wit . ' They savour of the Courtier , it must be allowed , and not of the Commonwealthsman . But Milton was a Courtier when he wrote the Masque at Ludlow ...
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