The Great Poets and Their TheologyAmerican Baptist Publication Society, 1897 - 531 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 15
Página 13
... for neither of these is described in the poem . In the first line of the first book we are forewarned against such misapprehensions , when the subject announced is Achilles ' wrath . The first book Unity of the "Iliad"
... for neither of these is described in the poem . In the first line of the first book we are forewarned against such misapprehensions , when the subject announced is Achilles ' wrath . The first book Unity of the "Iliad"
Página 32
... described . Now , the one great house and gathering place is replaced by many and smaller mansions ; meetings are of the few ; we find the exclusiveness of good society ; there are other means of entertainment as well ; the song must be ...
... described . Now , the one great house and gathering place is replaced by many and smaller mansions ; meetings are of the few ; we find the exclusiveness of good society ; there are other means of entertainment as well ; the song must be ...
Página 154
... described , so that he too could say : Quorum magnaque pars fui . It is this in- tense realism which gives the " Divine Comedy " its chief power . It is the utterance of the greatest man of his time , and one of the greatest men of all ...
... described , so that he too could say : Quorum magnaque pars fui . It is this in- tense realism which gives the " Divine Comedy " its chief power . It is the utterance of the greatest man of his time , and one of the greatest men of all ...
Página 167
... described poetry as " simple , sensuous , passionate , " he meant by " simple " this very conform- ity to the laws of nature and of mind - simplicity in- cludes the idea of genuine rationality . But if poetry is an expression of the ...
... described poetry as " simple , sensuous , passionate , " he meant by " simple " this very conform- ity to the laws of nature and of mind - simplicity in- cludes the idea of genuine rationality . But if poetry is an expression of the ...
Página 194
... described without hesitation the unseen world . But Shakespeare has no heaven and no hell ; he deals only with this present life ; even his ghosts and witches tell us nothing of the life beyond - they are forbidden to tell the secrets ...
... described without hesitation the unseen world . But Shakespeare has no heaven and no hell ; he deals only with this present life ; even his ghosts and witches tell us nothing of the life beyond - they are forbidden to tell the secrets ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Términos y frases comunes
Æneid Alfred Tennyson beauty believe Browning's called character Christ Christian church Coleridge conscience Dante Dante's dark death declared Divine Comedy doctrine dramatic earth Eclogues element epic eternal evil expression eyes fact faith Faust feeling freedom genius Georgics give God's gods Goethe Goethe's greatest Greek guilt heart heaven hell holiness Homer hope human nature ideal Iliad imagination immortal Italy John Milton King knowledge learned light literary literature live lost Macbeth man's means Milton mind Monist moral never Odyssey pantheistic Paradise Paradise Lost passion Peisistratus philosophy poem poet poet's poetic poetry punishment purgatory Puritan regard religion religious Robert Browning Roman Rome Satan Scripture seems sense Shakespeare song sorrow soul sphere spirit star story sublime sweet Tennyson thee theology things thou thought tion true truth universe verse Virgil voice whole words Wordsworth writing youth Zeus