Literature and CriticismChatto and Windus, 1953 - 190 pages |
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Page 58
... immediately home to us than one containing recondite matter . The blackbird's claw may tickle the fancy strongly , but Macbeth's mind and hands are immediately present to our senses and our mind . The commonplace content has of course ...
... immediately home to us than one containing recondite matter . The blackbird's claw may tickle the fancy strongly , but Macbeth's mind and hands are immediately present to our senses and our mind . The commonplace content has of course ...
Page 115
... immediately recognised as an example of false feeling . It is not a poem of the over- charged variety ; it is something less defensible than that . It is a palpable example of ' poetical ' manufacture , where a trivial fancy is exalted ...
... immediately recognised as an example of false feeling . It is not a poem of the over- charged variety ; it is something less defensible than that . It is a palpable example of ' poetical ' manufacture , where a trivial fancy is exalted ...
Page 181
... immediately threw himself into the consideration of the patient , and inquired strictly into all that had occurred . Raffles was worse , would take hardly any food , was persistently wakeful and restlessly raving ; but still not violent ...
... immediately threw himself into the consideration of the patient , and inquired strictly into all that had occurred . Raffles was worse , would take hardly any food , was persistently wakeful and restlessly raving ; but still not violent ...
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abstract alliteration analysis Antony attitude beauty bird Bulstrode comparison complex concrete contrast convey couplet course D. H. Lawrence Dead mountain mouth death diction effect Eliot emotion emotionally emphasis Enobarbus example experience expression eyes F. R. Leavis fear feeling felt force Four Quartets George Eliot given gives Hopkins human I. A. Richards idea imagery imagination impressive inevitably instance intended ISAAC ROSENBERG kind lack language lines literary criticism living Lydgate meaning ment Milton mind movement musical nature ness obvious Paradise Lost passage perhaps phrase physical play poem poet poet's poetic thought poetry present prose prose-meaning quiet readers reveal rhyming words rhythm Ring seems sense sensuous Shakespeare Shelley's shew significance simile simple sound speech stanza stress strong suggest sweet T. S. Eliot thee things Thomas Hardy thou tion tone truth vague verse vivid W. B. Yeats whole Wordsworth