Explorations 3, Band 3Chatto & Windus, 1976 - 196 Seiten |
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Seite 11
... mind skating easily over the sur- face , that insists on it doing some work for itself . It may be a latent conflict between two words brought into conjunction , as in Wordsworth's description of London as ' a sight so touching in its ...
... mind skating easily over the sur- face , that insists on it doing some work for itself . It may be a latent conflict between two words brought into conjunction , as in Wordsworth's description of London as ' a sight so touching in its ...
Seite 14
... mind . ' This , I may add , follows an account of ' the splendid variety , co - ordination , and activity of the verbal tenses ' in a passage from The Ambassadors . ^ But of course nothing like this would be worth our while unless we ...
... mind . ' This , I may add , follows an account of ' the splendid variety , co - ordination , and activity of the verbal tenses ' in a passage from The Ambassadors . ^ But of course nothing like this would be worth our while unless we ...
Seite 42
... mind and the corresponding activity of the reader are parts of a remarkable account of what modern criticism calls ' realization ' , that sense of living actuality that comes about when the mind is called on to do several different ...
... mind and the corresponding activity of the reader are parts of a remarkable account of what modern criticism calls ' realization ' , that sense of living actuality that comes about when the mind is called on to do several different ...
Inhalt
Literature and the Teaching of Literature | 9 |
Henry James and Human Liberty | 24 |
Two Notes on Coleridge i Coleridge as Critic | 38 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
action Alcibiades Apemantus attitudes Ben Jonson Biographia Literaria Blake Caliban called characters Coleridge Coleridge's connexion consciousness course criticism death define Donne Donne's doth dramatic edition effect embodied energy engaged English essay example experience explicit expression fact feeling Friend give Hamlet hath Henry James Henry VI Herbert's human I. A. Richards I.ii imagination interest IV.i IV.iii John Donne Jonson Jonson's poems kind King Lear literary literature live Lord Macbeth masque meaning mind murder nature novel obvious particular pattern perhaps poet poetic poetry political presented Prospero question reader reference relation rhythm Richard Richard II scene sense Shakespeare Shakespeare's plays Shakespeare's thought Shakespearian simply social society song soul speak speech stanza suggestion T. S. Eliot Tempest thee theme things thou Timon of Athens tion tone tragedy truth University verse whole words