Proceedings of the British Academy, Volume 9British Academy - Humanities |
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Page 127
... feeling might be . There is no limit to the move- ment towards self - completion which is imminent in them . This is the meaning of the dialectic which impels towards a fuller and higher degree in the knowledge of reality which they ...
... feeling might be . There is no limit to the move- ment towards self - completion which is imminent in them . This is the meaning of the dialectic which impels towards a fuller and higher degree in the knowledge of reality which they ...
Page 219
... feeling . The moving accident is not my trade ' ; or , as he puts it in the prose of the great Preface , it is not the action and situation which , in his poems , give importance to the feeling , but on the contrary the feeling which ...
... feeling . The moving accident is not my trade ' ; or , as he puts it in the prose of the great Preface , it is not the action and situation which , in his poems , give importance to the feeling , but on the contrary the feeling which ...
Page 409
... feeling of trepidation ; and that feeling is increased in me by a small personal matter . I am , I think , the first man from Raleigh's county who has been honoured with an invitation to deliver the lecture which is called after his ...
... feeling of trepidation ; and that feeling is increased in me by a small personal matter . I am , I think , the first man from Raleigh's county who has been honoured with an invitation to deliver the lecture which is called after his ...
Contents
ANNUAL REPORT FOR 191819 | 19 |
ANNUAL REPORT FOR 191920 | 31 |
THE VALUE AND THE METHODS OF MYTHOLOGIC STUDY By L | 37 |
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Academy Aeginetic standard aesthetic ancient Anglo-Saxon appears artist beauty British Brobdingnag bull Byron called Celtic century character cistophoric Cnossus coins commonplace Cretan Crete critics Croce Cydonia doctrine document drachms Drapier's Letters Elected England English experience expression fact feeling France Gortyna grammes Greek Gulliver Gulliver's Travels Hegel human Ibid imagination impressed seal interest intuition Ireland Irish island Italian Italy King knowledge Lacnunga language later Lectures Leonardo less letters Lord Lyttus magic means medicine method mind modern nations native nature never obverse original passage passion perhaps philosophy poem poet poetry political Professor race reality relations Rhodian Roman Roman Britain seal seems sense Shakespeare speak specimens spirit staters story Svoronos Swift tetradrachms things thought tion to-day tradition truth types verse Voyage weight whole wiĆ° Woden words Wordsworth writings written Yahoos