Rousseau and Romanticism |
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Page 29
... Molière is too much on the side of the opposition . He does not seem to put his good sense into the service of some ... Molière's good sense perceived is not the highest and THE TERMS CLASSIC AND ROMANTIC 29.
... Molière is too much on the side of the opposition . He does not seem to put his good sense into the service of some ... Molière's good sense perceived is not the highest and THE TERMS CLASSIC AND ROMANTIC 29.
Page 30
... Molière in the name of instinct as Pascal would have assailed him in the name of insight , and fought sense with ... Molière a philistine , but one may at least grant M. Faguet that Molière's good sense is not always suffi- ciently ...
... Molière in the name of instinct as Pascal would have assailed him in the name of insight , and fought sense with ... Molière a philistine , but one may at least grant M. Faguet that Molière's good sense is not always suffi- ciently ...
Page 76
... ( Molière , Boileau , etc. ) on this drawing - room affectation , it lingered on and still led in the eighteenth century , as Rousseau complained , to " inconceivable refinements . " At the same time we should recollect that there is a ...
... ( Molière , Boileau , etc. ) on this drawing - room affectation , it lingered on and still led in the eighteenth century , as Rousseau complained , to " inconceivable refinements . " At the same time we should recollect that there is a ...
Page 214
... Molière and others ridiculed the adjectives and adverbs with which the précieuses sought to express their special type of superla- tiveness and intensity ( extrêmement , furieusement , ter- riblement , etc. ) . Alfred de Musset's ...
... Molière and others ridiculed the adjectives and adverbs with which the précieuses sought to express their special type of superla- tiveness and intensity ( extrêmement , furieusement , ter- riblement , etc. ) . Alfred de Musset's ...
Page 231
... Molière's treatment of the legend we can also see the beginnings of the philanthropic pose . With the progress of Rousseauism Don Juan tends to become an " idealist , " to seek to satisfy in his amorous adventures not merely his senses ...
... Molière's treatment of the legend we can also see the beginnings of the philanthropic pose . With the progress of Rousseauism Don Juan tends to become an " idealist , " to seek to satisfy in his amorous adventures not merely his senses ...
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according actual æsthetic Arcadian Aristotle artificial beautiful soul become Buddha Buddhism Byron centre Chateaubriand Christian classical classicist convention cult decorum Descartes desire discipline doctrine dream eighteenth century element emotional especially ethical imagination example expansive fact feeling French Friedrich Schlegel George Sand German Goethe Greek happiness heart human law human nature humanistic ideal illusion imitation impulse infinite inner insight intellect less literature look lust man's mediæval melancholy ment merely modern Molière moral movement Musset natural law naturalistic neo-classical neo-classicists ness Novalis one's original genius outer passage passion perception perhaps philosophy poet poetical poetry positive and critical primitivistic pure rationalistic reality reason religion religious revery rôle romantic romanticism romanticist Rous Rousseau Rousseauist says scarcely Schlegel sense Shelley Socrates spirit spontaneity superrational symbol Taoist temperament temperamental things tion traditional true truth unity virtue whole word Wordsworth