The Substance of Literature: Being an Essay Principally on the Influence of the Subject Matter of Sin, Ignorance and Misery in LiteratureF. Rogers, 1913 - 286 pagini |
Din interiorul cărții
Rezultatele 1 - 5 din 10
Pagina 37
... produce the variegation and modes , moods and works of literature . He does indeed hint at an influence of this sort , when he enlarges on the effect of surroundings , and when he tells us so frequently what new results in art and ...
... produce the variegation and modes , moods and works of literature . He does indeed hint at an influence of this sort , when he enlarges on the effect of surroundings , and when he tells us so frequently what new results in art and ...
Pagina 47
... produce a Plato , a Sophocles , a Shakespeare , a Goethe , or a Cuvier . If we are , upon the logical extremes assumed by an Origin of Derivation , to begin with something like a Hottentot * or a Fuegian , it is a rather startling task ...
... produce a Plato , a Sophocles , a Shakespeare , a Goethe , or a Cuvier . If we are , upon the logical extremes assumed by an Origin of Derivation , to begin with something like a Hottentot * or a Fuegian , it is a rather startling task ...
Pagina 96
... produce psychological results which will greatly narrow and limit our sensibilities , so far as those sensibilities are involved in a response to literary appeals based upon Sin , Ignorance , and Misery . There might be some ...
... produce psychological results which will greatly narrow and limit our sensibilities , so far as those sensibilities are involved in a response to literary appeals based upon Sin , Ignorance , and Misery . There might be some ...
Pagina 178
... produce the wide , crowded , and uninter- rupted currents of publications which we call liter- ature . But not only does Ignorance and Misery modify Sin , but temperament , mind , individual aptitude , taste and judgment , so that here ...
... produce the wide , crowded , and uninter- rupted currents of publications which we call liter- ature . But not only does Ignorance and Misery modify Sin , but temperament , mind , individual aptitude , taste and judgment , so that here ...
Pagina 190
... produce History of exceptional literary interest because the New World is good . Its best results lie in those years when European wickedness invaded , devastated , and ruled it , when the Spaniards conquered Mexico and Peru , when it ...
... produce History of exceptional literary interest because the New World is good . Its best results lie in those years when European wickedness invaded , devastated , and ruled it , when the Spaniards conquered Mexico and Peru , when it ...
Alte ediții - Afișează-le pe toate
The Substance of Literature: Being an Essay Principally on the Influence of ... Louis Pope Gratacap Vizualizare completă - 1913 |
The Substance of Literature: Being an Essay Principally on the Influence of ... Louis Pope Gratacap Vizualizare completă - 1913 |
The Substance of Literature: Being an Essay Principally on the Influence of ... Louis Pope Gratacap Nu există previzualizare disponibilă - 2016 |
Termeni și expresii frecvente
admirable Aeschylus ance artistic aspects beauty becomes century character charm classic color Comedy divine drama emotions English Epeians epic expression eyes facts fancy feeling fiction flowers France Frances Burney French literature furnish genius Grecian Greece Greek Greek literature heart Heart of Midlothian Heaven Howells human humour ideal ideas Ignorance and Misery Iliad imaginative impersonal impressions influence intellectual interest invention J. P. Mahaffy Jane Austen Jocasta language Leigh Hunt less liter mean ment mental mind modern moods moral nature Neleus ness never novel Oedipus passion peculiar perfection personal element phases picture picturesque play poet poetic poetry produce Pylos race Rig Veda romanticism Sainte Beuve says scenes seems sense sentiment Shakespeare Sophocles soul spirit story style and treatment subject matter Substance of Literature Symonds sympathy Taine taste temperament things thought Thracian tion tive tragedies ture verbal Victor Hugo wonderful words writing