T.S. Eliot and the Language of PoetryAkadémiai Kiadó, 1989 - Počet stran: 149 |
Vyhledávání v knize
Výsledky 1-3 z 23
Strana 37
... logical decorum ' would have been meaningless to a Renaissance mind Renaissance poets would not see a quarrel here , and hence show themselves entirely willing to admit clarity in the logical structure of a work of art as an element in ...
... logical decorum ' would have been meaningless to a Renaissance mind Renaissance poets would not see a quarrel here , and hence show themselves entirely willing to admit clarity in the logical structure of a work of art as an element in ...
Strana 61
... logical language is taken as the type of all valid language " 25 and they all confess to the very premises which are ... logical positivism " there is , at least in the early phases of the school's philosophical activities , an attempt ...
... logical language is taken as the type of all valid language " 25 and they all confess to the very premises which are ... logical positivism " there is , at least in the early phases of the school's philosophical activities , an attempt ...
Strana 64
... logical arguments had been established " . Poetry also becomes affected by this new division of functions . In the period subsequent to the Renais- sance - especially in the second half of the seventeenth century and during much of the ...
... logical arguments had been established " . Poetry also becomes affected by this new division of functions . In the period subsequent to the Renais- sance - especially in the second half of the seventeenth century and during much of the ...
Běžně se vyskytující výrazy a sousloví
Ady Endre Akadémiai Kiadó artistic aspects attempt Bacon Barfield Budapest clear and distinct cognitive concern connection context Csokonai diaphoric discourse dissociation of sensibility Donne Dryden earlier Eliot's critical Eliot's ideas Eliot's theory Elizabethan English poetry everyday F. H. Bradley F. R. Leavis F. W. Bateson faculties fancy feeling function Gondolat Grierson guage Hobbes Hungarian I. A. Richards ibid ideal of language images imagination important intellectual Kermode kind L. C. Knights Lancelot Andrewes language of poetry later least linguistic literal literary literature Locke's logical London meaning metaphor Metaphysical Poets Milton modern modes noted nyelv object period poem poetic language Poetry and Poets prose pseudo-statements R. P. Blackmur referential Renaissance Romanticism scientific seems sense sensuous seventeenth century Shakespeare Shelley statement Swinburne T. E. Hulme T. S. Eliot things thinking thought tion traditional truth Tuve Tuve's twentieth-century unified sensibility verse words