University of California Publications in English, Volume 8University of California Press, 1940 |
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Page 19
... doubt , -there is the sufficient explanation of his failure to seek the heights . An audience visibly present makes one self - conscious about high flying - unless , to be sure , one is intoxi- cated . The romantic poets of the ...
... doubt , -there is the sufficient explanation of his failure to seek the heights . An audience visibly present makes one self - conscious about high flying - unless , to be sure , one is intoxi- cated . The romantic poets of the ...
Page 108
... doubts . He wrote in Thoughts on Religion : I believe that thousands of our men would be orthodox ... if divines had ... doubt " are nu- merous . This is of course the familiar loose usage of the present and neither denies a process nor ...
... doubts . He wrote in Thoughts on Religion : I believe that thousands of our men would be orthodox ... if divines had ... doubt " are nu- merous . This is of course the familiar loose usage of the present and neither denies a process nor ...
Page 120
... doubt of the pictures presented to his mind , and this obviously in the horror the idea of murder raises in him : My thought , whose murder yet is but fantastical , Shakes so my single state of man that function Is smother'd in surmise ...
... doubt of the pictures presented to his mind , and this obviously in the horror the idea of murder raises in him : My thought , whose murder yet is but fantastical , Shakes so my single state of man that function Is smother'd in surmise ...
Contents
Chaucers Art in Relation to His Audience I | 1 |
Dramatist | 55 |
Hydriotaphia | 73 |
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Common terms and phrases
artistic associations attitude audience believe Canterbury Canterbury Tales characteristic Chaucer Christian Ciceronian Claudius common sense contrast course Criseyde criticism death divine doubt dramatic dramaturgic Edmund Gosse ence essay Established Church evidence experience expression fact faith feeling Gosse Grecian Urn Hamlet Hamlet's character Hazlitt hire Houyhnhnms human Ibid ideas images imagination immediate implied important John Keats Keats Keats's kind Knight's Tale Laertes living Lytton Strachey Macbeth matter means Melancholy Melibeus mind Montaigne murder narrative nature never Pandarus paradox passage philosophy picture play poem poet poetry present principle prologue Pseudodoxia Epidemica quod rational readers reason Religio Medici religion revenge rĂ´le says seems seyde Shakespeare shal Sir Thomas Browne skepticism story style swich Swift Tale technique ther things thinking thought tion Troilus truth and beauty Urn-Burial Vulgar Errors W. S. Hett Whan Wife of Bath William Hazlitt words writes