| Matthew Arnold - 1862 - 88 páginas
...repeating those lines than from hearing anything I can say about it. Let us try, however, what can be said, controlling what we say by examples. I think...grand style in poetry which present themselves. I think it will be found to exclude all poetry which is not in the grand style. And I think it contains... | |
| Matthew Arnold - 1862 - 88 páginas
...from repeating those lines than from hearing anything I can say about it Let us try, however, what can be said, controlling what we say by examples. I think...poetically gifted, treats with simplicity or with seventy a serious subject. I think this definition will be found to cover all instances of the grand... | |
| 1862 - 610 páginas
...evil days though fall'n, and evil tongues.' So far as it can be expressed in words, Mr Arnold ' thinks it will be found that the grand style arises in poetry,...with simplicity or with severity a serious subject' Nor is this, as one of Mr Arnold's critics has maintained it to be, a confusion of grandeur of thought... | |
| Matthew Arnold - 1883 - 334 páginas
...repeating those lines than from hearing anything I can say about it. Let us try, however, what can be said, controlling what we say by examples. I think...grand style in poetry which present themselves. I think it will be found to exclude all poetry which is not in the grand style. And I think it contains... | |
| Matthew Arnold - 1883 - 340 páginas
...repeating those lines than from hearing anything I can say about it. Let us try, however, what can be said, controlling what we say by examples. I think...that the grand style arises in poetry, when a noble 1 nature, poetically gifted, treats with simplicity or with il severity a serious subject. I think... | |
| Arthur Galton - 1884 - 84 páginas
...severe. And that too is furnished by Mr. Arnold, when he defines the grand style, which arises, he says, in poetry, " when a noble nature, poetically gifted,...with simplicity or with severity a serious subject." If poetry is judged to pass the first test safely, to stand its application, we may consider it to... | |
| Arthur Howard Galton - 1885 - 256 páginas
...severe. And that too is furnished by Mr. Arnold, when he defines the grand style, which arises, he says, in poetry, " when a noble nature, poetically gifted,...with simplicity or with severity a serious subject." If poetry is judged to pass the first test safely, to stand its application, we may consider it to... | |
| Hiram Corson - 1892 - 250 páginas
...' illustrates his own definition of the grand style, given in his essay 'On translating Homer': 'I think it will be found that the grand style arises...with simplicity or with severity a serious subject? A very comprehensive definition. If he had said, 'When one poetically gifted,' etc., omitting 'a noble... | |
| Edward Tompkins McLaughlin - 1893 - 284 páginas
...repeating those lines than from hearing anything I can say about it. Let us try, however, what can be said, controlling what we say by examples. I think...grand style in poetry which present themselves. I think it will be found to exclude all poetry which is not in the grand style. And I think it contains... | |
| Edward Tompkins McLaughlin - 1893 - 286 páginas
...repeating those lines than from hearing anything I can say about it. Let us try, however, what can be said, controlling what we say by examples. I think...grand style in poetry which present themselves. I think it will be found to exclude all poetry which is not in the grand style. And I think it contains... | |
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