Poetry as a Representative Art: An Essay in Comparative Aesthetics |
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Page ix
... developed in the epic , the realistic , and the dramatic , as expressed in all the arts ; and as differently expressed in the different arts , with illustrations showing the importance of making these ix distinctions . The further ...
... developed in the epic , the realistic , and the dramatic , as expressed in all the arts ; and as differently expressed in the different arts , with illustrations showing the importance of making these ix distinctions . The further ...
Page xi
... - Physiological Reason for this , 20 - Cultivated by Public Speaking , 21 - Recitative , and the Origin of Poetic and Musical Melody , 21 - Poetry , Song , Dance , all connected : but not developed from each other , xi.
... - Physiological Reason for this , 20 - Cultivated by Public Speaking , 21 - Recitative , and the Origin of Poetic and Musical Melody , 21 - Poetry , Song , Dance , all connected : but not developed from each other , xi.
Page xii
... developed from Ejaculatory or Instinctive Modes of Utterance , and in dramatic ELOCUTION , developed from Imitative or Reflective Utterance ; and then apply to Poetry , 33 - General Statement of what is Represented by Duration , Force ...
... developed from Ejaculatory or Instinctive Modes of Utterance , and in dramatic ELOCUTION , developed from Imitative or Reflective Utterance ; and then apply to Poetry , 33 - General Statement of what is Represented by Duration , Force ...
Page xv
... well as by Words , 164 - Misuse of Words , Enallage , 165 - Poetic Sounds are Artistic in the Degree in which they really represent Thought and Feeling , 171 . XV . MEANINGS OF WORDS AS DEVELOPED BY ASSOCIA- TION CONTENTS . XV.
... well as by Words , 164 - Misuse of Words , Enallage , 165 - Poetic Sounds are Artistic in the Degree in which they really represent Thought and Feeling , 171 . XV . MEANINGS OF WORDS AS DEVELOPED BY ASSOCIA- TION CONTENTS . XV.
Page xvi
... developed by Tendencies underlying the Formation of Primitive Words , 174— How these Tendencies lead to the Use of the same Word in Dif- ferent Senses , 175 - In the case of Words whose Meanings depend on Association , 175 - How what ...
... developed by Tendencies underlying the Formation of Primitive Words , 174— How these Tendencies lead to the Use of the same Word in Dif- ferent Senses , 175 - In the case of Words whose Meanings depend on Association , 175 - How what ...
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Common terms and phrases
accented syllable æsthetic alloyed artistic beginning breath cæsura CHAPTER character circumflex clouds comparison connection corresponding dark developed direct representation effects elements elocution elocutionary emotive expression eyes fact falling feeling feet figurative language force G. P. PUTNAM'S SONS give Greek heaven heigh-ho hexameter Homer ideas Idem Iliad illustrative representation imitative sounds indicates inflection instance instinctive Jean Ingelow kind light Locksley Hall Longfellow meaning metaphors methods metonymy metre Milton mind movement nature Notice o'er Othello Paradise Lost passage pause picture pitch plain language pleonasm poem poet poetic poetry present principles produced prose quotations reason reference reflective repre rhymes rhythm rising says sense sentence Shakespear simile singing Song soul stanza stream stress suggested sweet syllables tendency Tennyson termed terminal thee theory thing thou tion tone triple measure truth unaccented syllables utterance verse voice vowels wind words