The Achievement of T. S. Eliot: An Essay on the Nature of PoetryHoughton Mifflin, 1935 - 159 Seiten |
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Seite 42
... artist writes not the way he would , but the way he must . And the most important value of the artist to society , and the one element that lends his work enduring significance , is to give expression to the most pervading qualities of ...
... artist writes not the way he would , but the way he must . And the most important value of the artist to society , and the one element that lends his work enduring significance , is to give expression to the most pervading qualities of ...
Seite 43
... artist . Indeed , such a charge would overlook the fact that some of the poetry of the past which across the remove of time seems most ' spontaneous ' , that of Chaucer , for example , was actually a product of long experimentation in ...
... artist . Indeed , such a charge would overlook the fact that some of the poetry of the past which across the remove of time seems most ' spontaneous ' , that of Chaucer , for example , was actually a product of long experimentation in ...
Seite 127
... artist like Milton to write , in addition to his poems , important political and religious tracts as well . My point is simply once more the chief assumption of my essay : that the poet and the political theorist , the artist and the ...
... artist like Milton to write , in addition to his poems , important political and religious tracts as well . My point is simply once more the chief assumption of my essay : that the poet and the political theorist , the artist and the ...
Inhalt
Tradition and the Individual Talent I | 1 |
The Problem for the Contemporary Artist 3 335 55 | 34 |
The Objective Correlative | 55 |
Urheberrecht | |
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