The Achievement of T.S. Eliot: An Essay on the Nature of PoetryHoughton Mifflin, 1935 - 159 Seiten |
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Seite 45
... range of his particular equipment of knowledge , have given him up as ' a poet for the learned ' . On the other hand are the smaller body of readers who have done the greatest disservice to his reputation - I mean those who regard his ...
... range of his particular equipment of knowledge , have given him up as ' a poet for the learned ' . On the other hand are the smaller body of readers who have done the greatest disservice to his reputation - I mean those who regard his ...
Seite 59
... ranges of life in a great metropolis . Only his infinitely sensitive power to ' foresuffer all ' could embrace the violent ... range in ability to fit his style to his subject is furnished by the remarkably different manners in which he ...
... ranges of life in a great metropolis . Only his infinitely sensitive power to ' foresuffer all ' could embrace the violent ... range in ability to fit his style to his subject is furnished by the remarkably different manners in which he ...
Seite 136
... range of experience than would at first appear is the fact that they release markedly different shades of feeling according to their special contexts . The desert rocks and dry bones of ' The Waste Land ' and the soaring gull at the ...
... range of experience than would at first appear is the fact that they release markedly different shades of feeling according to their special contexts . The desert rocks and dry bones of ' The Waste Land ' and the soaring gull at the ...
Inhalt
The Problem for the Contemporary Artist | 33 |
The Objective Correlative | 55 |
The Auditory Imagination | 81 |
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actual Alfred Prufrock appear Arnaut Daniel Arnold artist Ash Wednesday aware Baudelaire beauty believe Church complete conception consciousness contemporary contrast Coriolanus criticism Dante Dante's Donne Donne's dramatic elements Eliot's poetry Elizabethan emotion English essay essential example experience expression Ezra Pound fact Gerontion give glimpse Hollow Men Hulme human I. A. Richards imagery images impression individual intellectual Joyce Keats Laforgue Lancelot Andrewes light lines literary literature material mature means merely metaphysical metaphysical poets mind modern nature objective correlative observed passage pattern perception phrase poem poet poet's poetic Pound precisely preoccupations present prose Prufrock reader reading realization reflections relation religious remarked revealed rhythm Sacred Wood seems sense Shakespeare significance simply society spirit structure suggest Sweeney symbol symbolists T. E. Hulme T. S. Eliot Thee thing tion tradition turn understanding verse Waste Land whole wholly words writing