The Study and Appreciation of Literature |
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Page 82
... Nature that is ours ; We have given our hearts away , a sordid boon ! This Sea that bares her bosom to the moon ... Nature ; in the sestet he imagines himself living in Pagan times when man , since he made Nature his re- ligion , could ...
... Nature that is ours ; We have given our hearts away , a sordid boon ! This Sea that bares her bosom to the moon ... Nature ; in the sestet he imagines himself living in Pagan times when man , since he made Nature his re- ligion , could ...
Page 135
... nature . The reader objects to the death of Wildeve and Eustacia in The Return of the Native because that death is ... natural . In defiance of all our observation most of us still believe that man is master of his fate . Hence we call ...
... nature . The reader objects to the death of Wildeve and Eustacia in The Return of the Native because that death is ... natural . In defiance of all our observation most of us still believe that man is master of his fate . Hence we call ...
Page 221
... nature , and power of vivid description . The nature essay at its best has a human touch . Its primary aim is to reflect the world in which man lives , but in that world must somewhere be the shadow of man . It is this human touch which ...
... nature , and power of vivid description . The nature essay at its best has a human touch . Its primary aim is to reflect the world in which man lives , but in that world must somewhere be the shadow of man . It is this human touch which ...
Common terms and phrases
action Æschylus audience ballad beauty Ben Jonson characters charm classic climax comedy complete criticism Darcy death developed dominance drama dramatic literature dramatist Edipus eighteenth century Elizabeth Elizabethan emotional English literature epic essay essayist experience exposition expression fate feel fiction George Eliot Greek tragedy Hamlet heroic heroic couplet human Iago iambic iambic pentameter ideas illusion imaginative important incident influence intense interest King literary lives lyric lyrical poetry Matthew Arnold Milton mind modern narrative neo-classic never novel novelist Othello Pater pattern period play plot poem poet poetic poetry popular present Pride and Prejudice prose reader Renaissance rhyme rhythm romance satire scene sense Shakespeare social sometimes song sonnet soul speech spirit stage stanza story structure student style sweet Tale Tartuffe thee theme thou thought tion trimeter unity verse vivid Walter Pater women words writers
References to this book
Catalogue of the Lamont Library, Harvard College Harvard University. Library. Lamont Library,Lamont Library No preview available - 1953 |