Matthew Arnold: Between Two WorldsRobert Giddings |
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Page 71
... feeling . . . . Such a disposition has become characteristic , and both the practice and appreciation of art have suffered ... feel it , yet how imaginative it is , how disproportioned to the real strength of the creature ! There is more ...
... feeling . . . . Such a disposition has become characteristic , and both the practice and appreciation of art have suffered ... feel it , yet how imaginative it is , how disproportioned to the real strength of the creature ! There is more ...
Page 116
... feels alone ? 40 Weakness , in wholesale contrast to the ' courage ' of Byron , is linked to obscurity in Arnold's ... feel to be his individual portion.43 To confess such ' weakness ' while bowing down to the superior power of earlier ...
... feels alone ? 40 Weakness , in wholesale contrast to the ' courage ' of Byron , is linked to obscurity in Arnold's ... feel to be his individual portion.43 To confess such ' weakness ' while bowing down to the superior power of earlier ...
Page 133
... feel , Arnold capped his criticism with the ultimate insult that his friends were ' more American than English'.26 ... feeling . Hence his denigration of comedy , which he felt evaded feeling , and hence his championing of tragedy as the ...
... feel , Arnold capped his criticism with the ultimate insult that his friends were ' more American than English'.26 ... feeling . Hence his denigration of comedy , which he felt evaded feeling , and hence his championing of tragedy as the ...
Contents
Introduction by Robert Giddings | 7 |
Arnold in Coketown by Alan Chedzoy | 26 |
Some Functions | 44 |
Copyright | |
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Anarchy appeared authority become Bible British calls Catholic Celt Celtic Celtic Literature Church civilization Colenso common course criticism culture death effect England English essay example experience fact feel force Function give human idea intellectual Ireland Irish kind language later learning lectures less Letters literary literature live London look Mark matter Matthew Arnold meaning mind moral nature never notes Oxford pain passage passed poem poet poetry political practice present Prose Writings published question quoted reader reason reform religion remained respect Romantic Ruskin schools seems seen sense social society spirit sublime suffering suggests Super teaching things Thomas thought truth turn University Victorian whole Wordsworth writing Writings of Arnold wrote