Essays by Divers Hands: Being the Transactions of the Royal Society of Literature, Band 20 |
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Seite 35
... poetry is literally sincere , the direct echo of a great soul . Poetry , the source of all this consolation and joy , was , after all , the speech of members of the British middle class , i.e. , of members purified and ennobled , and ...
... poetry is literally sincere , the direct echo of a great soul . Poetry , the source of all this consolation and joy , was , after all , the speech of members of the British middle class , i.e. , of members purified and ennobled , and ...
Seite 87
... poetry in a sense in which Pope's is not . But why should we do so ? The reason lies in the differing quality of our enjoyment , which is contemplative in one case and not in the other . I began this paper by asking what precisely was ...
... poetry in a sense in which Pope's is not . But why should we do so ? The reason lies in the differing quality of our enjoyment , which is contemplative in one case and not in the other . I began this paper by asking what precisely was ...
Seite 98
... poetry . But the question is misconceived ; for the chief aim of poetry , as distinct from that of verse , which may instruct or improve us , lies simply in the experience , infinitely various , which poetry creates for the ...
... poetry . But the question is misconceived ; for the chief aim of poetry , as distinct from that of verse , which may instruct or improve us , lies simply in the experience , infinitely various , which poetry creates for the ...
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action actor admirable angels artist audience beauty began Byzantine art called century character church classical Colet contemplation creature D.LITT delight disinterested dream emotion England English Erasmus wrote Erasmus's essay experience expression faculties feel flower friends Garrick genius George gift GORDON BOTTOMLEY Greek human humanist ideas imagination inspiration intellectual interpret John Colet JOHN MARTIN-HARVEY knowledge Latin Laurence Binyon learning legend less letter literary criticism literature living LL.D Lord Mountjoy Matthew Arnold means mind modern moral Mountjoy nature never ourselves passion perhaps poem poet poetic poetry Praise of Folly prose Puritan passion quiet reading Renaissance Robert Bridges scholar scientific seems Selwyn Image sense Shelley sleep soul speak spirit STEPHEN GASELEE sure Sabina things thought tion Tunstall verse and poetry verse-writer W. H. Hudson Warham whole words Wordsworth write