The Sewanee Review, Volume 52T. Hodgson, 1944 - American fiction |
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Page 414
... ideas . These " furnish the most fundamental , the most revelatory , background ; for the plays of Shakespeare are the expression of very life . " This enlargement of the historical basis for criticism has in fact been going on for some ...
... ideas . These " furnish the most fundamental , the most revelatory , background ; for the plays of Shakespeare are the expression of very life . " This enlargement of the historical basis for criticism has in fact been going on for some ...
Page 417
... ideas by adopting an aesthetic that must ultimately be repudiated . A prefatory warning that the historical interpretations are delib- erately incomplete does not explain how satisfactory interpreta- tions of any length can be produced ...
... ideas by adopting an aesthetic that must ultimately be repudiated . A prefatory warning that the historical interpretations are delib- erately incomplete does not explain how satisfactory interpreta- tions of any length can be produced ...
Page 581
... ideas " and the " private jokes " which so genuinely delighted the readers of Mr. Auden's early books will be as desperately out of fashion as D. H. Lawrence's manifestos on sex and obscenity are today . I think I am not far wrong if I ...
... ideas " and the " private jokes " which so genuinely delighted the readers of Mr. Auden's early books will be as desperately out of fashion as D. H. Lawrence's manifestos on sex and obscenity are today . I think I am not far wrong if I ...
Contents
The Necessity For Spiritual Revival Theodore M Greene | 14 |
Albert Taylor Bledsoe R M Weaver | 24 |
Albert Taylor Bledsoe | 34 |
Copyright | |
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Allen Tate American Aristotle Arthur Rimbaud Arthur Symons artist beauty century character criticism culture D. H. Lawrence dark death Dewey Dewey's distortion Donne Donne's dramatic East Coker Eliot emotion Empson England English experience expression expressionism expressionistic eyes face fact feeling Flaubert forest Forster French George Moore glade heart hero Hooker Howards End human Hutchins ideal ideas imagination intelligence isolation Keats light lines literary literature living look means Meiklejohn method mind modern moral nation nature neoclassicism never Nietzsche Nietzsche's novel Orson passion perhaps person philosophy phrase play poem poet poet's poetic poetry political Ransom reader reason rhetorical rhythm Rimbaud Rittersdorf scene seems sense Sewanee Review Shakespeare social spirit stage stanza suggests symbol Symons T. S. Eliot theme things Thomas thought tion tradition truth University Verlaine verse words Wordsworth writing young