Forms of Reflection: Genre and Culture in Meditational WritingJohns Hopkins University Press, 1993 - 232 Seiten |
Im Buch
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Seite 32
... nature rather than art . Since experience is a cumulative process , literary forms that are to convey expe- rience should depart from the closed structures of demonstrative reason- ing.53 So while the larger structure of The Great ...
... nature rather than art . Since experience is a cumulative process , literary forms that are to convey expe- rience should depart from the closed structures of demonstrative reason- ing.53 So while the larger structure of The Great ...
Seite 158
... nature has different fruits to offer : disinterested pleasure in the mere landscape and a Christian hope of distant gains in a life hereafter . The glee in rural poetry springs from superior feelings for nature , a disposition nature ...
... nature has different fruits to offer : disinterested pleasure in the mere landscape and a Christian hope of distant gains in a life hereafter . The glee in rural poetry springs from superior feelings for nature , a disposition nature ...
Seite 195
... nature , their method is the same : " If in SHAKESPEARE we find nature idealized into poetry , through the creative power of a profound yet observant medita- tion , so through the meditative observation of a DAVY , a WOLLASTON , or a ...
... nature , their method is the same : " If in SHAKESPEARE we find nature idealized into poetry , through the creative power of a profound yet observant medita- tion , so through the meditative observation of a DAVY , a WOLLASTON , or a ...
Inhalt
Method and the Varieties of Discourse | 1 |
Denham Walton Cowley and the Decentered Society | 41 |
Providence or Prudence? Fabling in Serious Reflections of Robinson Crusoe | 81 |
Urheberrecht | |
2 weitere Abschnitte werden nicht angezeigt.
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
allegory Angler Anniversaries appear argues argument attempts authority become century character circumstances Coleridge commerce common concepts concerned consider contemplation correspondence countess course court critics Crusoe cultivation culture Defoe Defoe's Denham describes differences discourse discussion divinity Donne Donne's edited eighteenth-century English epigrams essays fable fiction figures Forms of Reflection Friend genres georgic give Hall Hill human idea instance interpretation John kinds Lady later less letters literary literature London manners material matter means meditation method mind moral narrative nature opposing persons philosophical poems poetics poetry poets political practices present principles probable procedures progress Providence readers reason refinement regard relations represent retirement rhetoric romance sense Serious Seventeenth-Century Shaftesbury social society Soliloquy story structures taste things thought tion traditional true truth turn understanding University Press values virtue Walton whole writing