Lamb's Criticism: A Selection from the Literary Criticism of Charles LambThe University Press, 1923 - 114 Seiten |
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Seite x
... nature with the poet's he fixes in words ' the breath and finer spirit ' of romance , and again when he speaks of the Ballad of Chevy Chase . The difference between Sidney's criticism of Chevy Chase and Dryden's of Shakespeare is that ...
... nature with the poet's he fixes in words ' the breath and finer spirit ' of romance , and again when he speaks of the Ballad of Chevy Chase . The difference between Sidney's criticism of Chevy Chase and Dryden's of Shakespeare is that ...
Seite xiii
... nature to make out the worst case he could against himself , we must admit that his self - accusation is substantially true . It is impossible to deny that Lamb was lacking in range , that his attainments as a scholar were not great ...
... nature to make out the worst case he could against himself , we must admit that his self - accusation is substantially true . It is impossible to deny that Lamb was lacking in range , that his attainments as a scholar were not great ...
Seite xv
... for Lamb an inexplicable charm , but critically disappointing because it does not convey to us any hint of the nature of that charm . I have likewise excluded a number of short passages and phrases which INTRODUCTION XV METHOD OF SELECTING.
... for Lamb an inexplicable charm , but critically disappointing because it does not convey to us any hint of the nature of that charm . I have likewise excluded a number of short passages and phrases which INTRODUCTION XV METHOD OF SELECTING.
Seite xvi
... nature appeal so differently to different people , that I have not the smallest expectation that this selection will satisfy all or the majority of the lovers of Lamb who may chance to see it . Every Elian , I feel sure , will be ...
... nature appeal so differently to different people , that I have not the smallest expectation that this selection will satisfy all or the majority of the lovers of Lamb who may chance to see it . Every Elian , I feel sure , will be ...
Seite 1
... nature , to feel in ourselves , or to contemplate in another , is , perhaps , cowardice . To see a coward done to the life upon a stage would produce anything but mirth . Yet we most of us remember Jack Ban- nister's cowards . Could any ...
... nature , to feel in ourselves , or to contemplate in another , is , perhaps , cowardice . To see a coward done to the life upon a stage would produce anything but mirth . Yet we most of us remember Jack Ban- nister's cowards . Could any ...
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