The Sewanee Review, Volume 52T. Hodgson, 1944 - American fiction |
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Page 313
... Shakespeare's work , can too easily forget that Shakespeare was a practical playwright , not a mere moralist or teacher , and that when he describes a particular human situation or relates it to general values , he is doing so in order ...
... Shakespeare's work , can too easily forget that Shakespeare was a practical playwright , not a mere moralist or teacher , and that when he describes a particular human situation or relates it to general values , he is doing so in order ...
Page 414
T SHAKESPEARE'S TREATMENT OF CONVENTIONAL IDEAS HE basic problems of Shakespearean criticism are con- tinually revealed to be those of philosophy and criticism in general . Scholarly disclosure of the milieu in which Shake- speare ...
T SHAKESPEARE'S TREATMENT OF CONVENTIONAL IDEAS HE basic problems of Shakespearean criticism are con- tinually revealed to be those of philosophy and criticism in general . Scholarly disclosure of the milieu in which Shake- speare ...
Page 416
... Shakespeare intended him to embody all that a king should be .... " To doubt that this was Shakespeare's intention , in other words , is to ask him to have aimed at some kind of modern liberal ideal in an age of limited monarchy . The ...
... Shakespeare intended him to embody all that a king should be .... " To doubt that this was Shakespeare's intention , in other words , is to ask him to have aimed at some kind of modern liberal ideal in an age of limited monarchy . The ...
Contents
AUTHOR | 7 |
The Necessity For Spiritual Revival Theodore M Greene | 14 |
Albert Taylor Bledsoe R M Weaver | 24 |
Copyright | |
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aesthetic Allen Tate American aristocratic Aristotle Arthur Rimbaud Arthur Symons artistic beauty Bledsoe century character Christian Corley criticism culture D. H. Lawrence dark death Dewey Dewey's distortion Donne dramatic East Coker Eliot emotional Empson England English experience expression expressionism expressionistic eyes fact feeling Flaubert forest freedom French George Moore glade heart Hooker Howards End human Hutchins ideal ideas imagination individual intellectual intelligence isolation Jefferson Keats liberal light lines literary literature living look Madame Bovary means Meiklejohn metaphysical method mind modern moral nation nature neoclassicism never Nietzsche novel Orson passion philosophy play poem poet poetic poetry political reader reason rhetorical Rimbaud scene seems sense Sewanee Sewanee Review Shakespeare social society spirit stage stanza symbol T. S. Eliot theme things thought tion tradition truth University Verlaine verse words Wordsworth writing