English Institute EssaysColumbia University Press, 1957 |
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Página 17
... given character . All these results , however dis- tinguishable from our responses in practical life , depend in great part on beliefs and dispositions which we bring to the poem from life ; and these operate not as antagonists to our ...
... given character . All these results , however dis- tinguishable from our responses in practical life , depend in great part on beliefs and dispositions which we bring to the poem from life ; and these operate not as antagonists to our ...
Página 121
... given in easiness and happy expansion ; sometimes a gale bursting all of a sudden , through which everything is given in violence and rapture ; sometimes the gift of the beginning of a song ; sometimes an outburst of unstoppable words ...
... given in easiness and happy expansion ; sometimes a gale bursting all of a sudden , through which everything is given in violence and rapture ; sometimes the gift of the beginning of a song ; sometimes an outburst of unstoppable words ...
Página 124
... given to an obsession , " 31 or to what he sometimes calls a “ ruling passion . " And I take it that when he speaks in this way he has in mind the poet's habit of loyalty to some way of seeing things , by means of which he grapples and ...
... given to an obsession , " 31 or to what he sometimes calls a “ ruling passion . " And I take it that when he speaks in this way he has in mind the poet's habit of loyalty to some way of seeing things , by means of which he grapples and ...
Conteúdo
Foreword | 1 |
Tradition and Experience | 31 |
Implications of an Organic Theory of Poetry | 53 |
Direitos autorais | |
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achieved actors aesthetic Allen Tate artist autonomy belief as faith belief as opinion character Christian Cleanth Brooks coherence communication concern contemporary context course creative culture Dante Dante's disbelief Divine Divine Comedy doctrine Donne's dramatic emotional essay ethical existence experience fact feel function human Hunter College I. A. Richards Ibid Ideas of Order imagination insists kind King Lear knowledge language Lear literary art Literature and Belief living London M. H. ABRAMS mask meaning meditation ment Milton mind moral Murray Krieger nature object person philosophical play poem poet poet's poetic truth poetry presents problem of belief Queens College question Ransom reader reality religion religious response Richards's role seems sense Shakespeare speak speaker statement Stevens Stevens's structure T. S. Eliot theory thing thou thought tion vision Vivas voice W. B. Yeats W. K. Wimsatt Wallace Stevens William words writer Yeats York Yvor Winters