The Craft of LiteratureMethuen & Company Limited, 1925 - 183 lappuses |
No grāmatas satura
1.–3. rezultāts no 32.
13. lappuse
... picture to the mind . A successful epithet compels atten- tion , making us pause until we have made in our minds all the possible pictures that it suggests . Shakespeare's work alone would provide sufficient examples of this wizardry in ...
... picture to the mind . A successful epithet compels atten- tion , making us pause until we have made in our minds all the possible pictures that it suggests . Shakespeare's work alone would provide sufficient examples of this wizardry in ...
26. lappuse
... pictures no less than to embody thought , needs imagery as fundamentally as it needs sound and rhythm . And its need ... picture that no doubt lingered and disturbed . Simile begins in its simplest form as a comparison between one object ...
... pictures no less than to embody thought , needs imagery as fundamentally as it needs sound and rhythm . And its need ... picture that no doubt lingered and disturbed . Simile begins in its simplest form as a comparison between one object ...
27. lappuse
... picture Milton gives may be irrelevant to the subject ; but when we come back to So seem'd far off the flying fiend " surely our minds are re- invigorated by the rich variety of the simile , and the story is renewed with perfect ease ...
... picture Milton gives may be irrelevant to the subject ; but when we come back to So seem'd far off the flying fiend " surely our minds are re- invigorated by the rich variety of the simile , and the story is renewed with perfect ease ...
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18th century A. A. Milne action æsthetic alliteration audience Bacon ballad beauty Beowulf blank verse characteristics characters Charlotte Brontë classical climax colour comedy contemporary device Dickens drama early effect Elizabethan emotion English literature English prose epic epithet essay essayists example expression feeling fiction figure give Goldsmith human idea imagination interest Jane Austen Julius Cæsar kind language less lines literary live lyric manner matter meaning metaphor method metre Midsummer Night's Dream Milton mind modern mood moon narrative natural never novel novelist passion pattern persons picture play plot poem poet poet's poetic poetry purpose reader realised reveal rhythm Richardson rime romantic scenes sense sentiment Shakespeare Shelley's short story simile simply songs sonnet sound speech stage stanza style subject-matter suggests tale Tamburlaine Tennyson's theme things thought tion to-day tragedy Twelfth Night unity W. B. Yeats W. H. Davies words writing written