The Critical Temper: From Milton to Romantic literature |
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Page 4
his conception of the imagination as perceptive response . All three had considered in one way or another the problem of pleasure and pain ; all three had more or less pointedly related pleasure and pain to the passions ; all had ...
his conception of the imagination as perceptive response . All three had considered in one way or another the problem of pleasure and pain ; all three had more or less pointedly related pleasure and pain to the passions ; all had ...
Page 5
Johnson's view of poetry as moral discourse is closer to the Greek and Latin conceptions of poetry ... than it is to Addison's discussion of natural genius in terms of a highly endowed imagination which functions creatively just as a ...
Johnson's view of poetry as moral discourse is closer to the Greek and Latin conceptions of poetry ... than it is to Addison's discussion of natural genius in terms of a highly endowed imagination which functions creatively just as a ...
Page 98
107 Hobbes's strictly empirical psychology thus establishes imagination on a sufficiently high level : a result of sensation , it provides man with a natural , unerring test of the validity of notions , names which stand for ideas ...
107 Hobbes's strictly empirical psychology thus establishes imagination on a sufficiently high level : a result of sensation , it provides man with a natural , unerring test of the validity of notions , names which stand for ideas ...
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Contents
William Cowper 17311800 | 41 |
David Garrick 17171779 | 80 |
Oliver Goldsmith 17301774 | 86 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
achieved action appear beauty become Blake Byron called century character Coleridge comedy complete criticism death early effect emotional English Essays experience expression fact feeling final followed force friends give human ideas imagination important interest Italy John Keats kind later less letters light lines literary literature living London manner matter means Milton mind moral narrative nature never novel once original Oxford Univ Paradise passages passion perhaps philosophical play poem poet poetic poetry political present prose published reader reason relation Romantic satire scenes seems sense sentimental Shelley social society spirit story structure style suggested symbolic theme things thought tion tradition true truth Univ University verse vision vols whole Wordsworth writing written wrote York