Literary Essays25 essays from the Victorian and Edwardian literary critic. |
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Page 25
... nature and necessary conclusion is not understood by him , but is realised and foreseen at every point by the audience . The comparison may be carried a step further : whether or no Shakespeare was aware of it , for us it is ...
... nature and necessary conclusion is not understood by him , but is realised and foreseen at every point by the audience . The comparison may be carried a step further : whether or no Shakespeare was aware of it , for us it is ...
Page 97
... Nature into the domain of poetry . Incidentally , it is curious to observe that nearly every literary revolution has been hailed by its supporters as a return to Nature . No less than the school of Coleridge and Words- worth , the ...
... Nature into the domain of poetry . Incidentally , it is curious to observe that nearly every literary revolution has been hailed by its supporters as a return to Nature . No less than the school of Coleridge and Words- worth , the ...
Page 144
... natural that the extraordinary nature of Blake's utterance in these latter works should have given rise to the belief that he was merely an inspired idiot - a madman who happened to be able to write good verses . That belief , made ...
... natural that the extraordinary nature of Blake's utterance in these latter works should have given rise to the belief that he was merely an inspired idiot - a madman who happened to be able to write good verses . That belief , made ...
Contents
SHAKESPEARES FINAL PERIOD The Independent | 1 |
WORDS AND POETRY The Hogarth Press 1928 | 16 |
RABELAIS The New Statesman Feb 16 1918 CHARAC | 31 |
Copyright | |
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