Literary Criticism; an Introductory ReaderLionel Trilling |
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Page 478
... turning away from objective reality and is content to regard either immediate experience , or experience inflated into a ... turn the ability to do this into a trade in which they are highly skilled , quite without relation to their own ...
... turning away from objective reality and is content to regard either immediate experience , or experience inflated into a ... turn the ability to do this into a trade in which they are highly skilled , quite without relation to their own ...
Page 479
... turn from ideals to reality . Thus Vautrin appears in the shabby little boarding - house in which Rastignac experiences his personal ideological crisis : thus he turns up again at the end of Lost Illusions when Lucien de Rubempré ...
... turn from ideals to reality . Thus Vautrin appears in the shabby little boarding - house in which Rastignac experiences his personal ideological crisis : thus he turns up again at the end of Lost Illusions when Lucien de Rubempré ...
Page 587
... turn take us back into myth . When we compare the conventional plot of a play of Plautus with the Christian myth of ... turning to myth because of the scope it affords them for uninhibited poetic imagery . If Shake- speare's Venus and ...
... turn take us back into myth . When we compare the conventional plot of a play of Plautus with the Christian myth of ... turning to myth because of the scope it affords them for uninhibited poetic imagery . If Shake- speare's Venus and ...
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Common terms and phrases
action admiration Aeschylus aesthetic appears Aristotle artist Balzac beauty become better Byron called century character Comedy conception consciousness culture D. H. Lawrence dramatic effect Eliot emotion English epic Epic poetry essay Euripides existence experience expression F. R. Leavis fact feeling fiction French genius give Greek Homer human I. A. Richards ideas Iliad images imagination imitation intellectual interpretation judgment kind King Lear language less literary criticism literature Matthew Arnold means metre mind modern moral myth nature never novel object Odysseus Paradise Lost passions perhaps person philosophical Plato play pleasure plot poem poet poet's poetic poetry present produced prose reader reality reason relation sense Shakespeare social Sophocles soul speak spirit story style T. S. Eliot theory things thought tion tragedy true truth University verse whole words Wordsworth writing