Lamb's Criticism: A Selection from the Literary Criticism of Charles LambThe University Press, 1923 - 114 Seiten |
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Seite viii
... mind the right receptive mood , then he will put Lamb among the very greatest of critics . One may , without any ... minds from the proper philosophic serenity . The obvious example in English of creative criticism gone wrong is Francis ...
... mind the right receptive mood , then he will put Lamb among the very greatest of critics . One may , without any ... minds from the proper philosophic serenity . The obvious example in English of creative criticism gone wrong is Francis ...
Seite ix
... mind of a poet , a cool head , the faculty of self - surrender and a certain modicum of bookishness ; probably many other qualities , but these will suffice . Some great men who have the qualification of being poets entirely lack at ...
... mind of a poet , a cool head , the faculty of self - surrender and a certain modicum of bookishness ; probably many other qualities , but these will suffice . Some great men who have the qualification of being poets entirely lack at ...
Seite xii
... mind been above all things quaint . Lamb's modesty and simplicity ( so beautifully described in Pater's essay in Appreciations ) are evident with the rarest ex- ceptions throughout his letters , from his earliest criticisms of Coleridge ...
... mind been above all things quaint . Lamb's modesty and simplicity ( so beautifully described in Pater's essay in Appreciations ) are evident with the rarest ex- ceptions throughout his letters , from his earliest criticisms of Coleridge ...
Seite xiii
... mind is desultory , sadly lacking in system , ' suggestive merely ' and ' content with fragments and scattered ... minds of many ages in any worthy degree of intensity . Then there is the charge brought by Hazlitt in his essay On ...
... mind is desultory , sadly lacking in system , ' suggestive merely ' and ' content with fragments and scattered ... minds of many ages in any worthy degree of intensity . Then there is the charge brought by Hazlitt in his essay On ...
Seite 4
... mind to conceive of a mad Shakspeare . The greatness of wit , by which the poetic talent is here chiefly to be understood , mani- fests itself in the admirable balance of all the faculties . Madness is the disproportionate straining or ...
... mind to conceive of a mad Shakspeare . The greatness of wit , by which the poetic talent is here chiefly to be understood , mani- fests itself in the admirable balance of all the faculties . Madness is the disproportionate straining or ...
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