The Achievement of T. S. Eliot: An Essay on the Nature of PoetryHoughton Mifflin, 1935 - 159 Seiten |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 25
Seite 2
... English critics since Arnold's death and since the brief plunge into the dead alley of aestheticism in the nineties , it is apparent that such representative work as that of Saintsbury , Whibley , or Bradley , or even that of W. P. Ker ...
... English critics since Arnold's death and since the brief plunge into the dead alley of aestheticism in the nineties , it is apparent that such representative work as that of Saintsbury , Whibley , or Bradley , or even that of W. P. Ker ...
Seite 124
... English Church in history means Hooker and Jeremy Taylor - and should mean Andrewes also : it means George Herbert , and it means the churches of Christopher Wren . This is not an error : a Church is to be judged by its intellectual ...
... English Church in history means Hooker and Jeremy Taylor - and should mean Andrewes also : it means George Herbert , and it means the churches of Christopher Wren . This is not an error : a Church is to be judged by its intellectual ...
Seite 125
... English Church belongs to the category of speculative philosophy . But the achievement of Hooker and Andrewes was to make the English Church more worthy of intellectual assent . No religion can survive the judgment of history unless the ...
... English Church belongs to the category of speculative philosophy . But the achievement of Hooker and Andrewes was to make the English Church more worthy of intellectual assent . No religion can survive the judgment of history unless the ...
Inhalt
Tradition and the Individual Talent I | 1 |
The Problem for the Contemporary Artist 3 335 55 | 34 |
The Objective Correlative | 55 |
Urheberrecht | |
3 weitere Abschnitte werden nicht angezeigt.
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
actual appear Arnold artist Ash Wednesday aware beauty become begin believe called Church close common complete consciousness contemporary contrast criticism Dante desire distinction Donne effect elements Eliot Elizabethan emotion enabled English equally essay essential exact example existence experience expression fact feeling felt final give human ideas images important impression individual interest kind knows light lines literature living material mature means merely method mind movement nature object observed once particular passage past pattern perhaps phrase poem poet poet's poetry possess possible Pound precise present range reader reading realization reason reflections relation remarked result revealed rhythm seems sense significance similar simply society sound spiritual statement structure suggest thing thought tion Tiresias tradition turn understanding verse Waste Land whole writing written