The Quarterly Review, Volume 291William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Sir John Murray IV, John Murray, Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle), George Walter Prothero John Murray, 1953 |
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Page 72
... experience thought is continually stimulated . This universality of literature - its expression of imagination , emotion , feeling , thought , all experience and knowledge is at once its glory and its problem . 6 Until fairly recently ...
... experience thought is continually stimulated . This universality of literature - its expression of imagination , emotion , feeling , thought , all experience and knowledge is at once its glory and its problem . 6 Until fairly recently ...
Page 74
... experience , or abstractly to convey ideas . Again , the sensuous quality of words , their aural effect , makes another problem . Perhaps the poet comes nearest to solving the problem of words , to making a synthesis and maintaining the ...
... experience , or abstractly to convey ideas . Again , the sensuous quality of words , their aural effect , makes another problem . Perhaps the poet comes nearest to solving the problem of words , to making a synthesis and maintaining the ...
Page 75
... experience is certainly significant , since without it no art can convince . It is difficult to understand in what sense Abercrombie uses the word real perhaps he means objective ; but in its broadest meaning reality is not merely an ...
... experience is certainly significant , since without it no art can convince . It is difficult to understand in what sense Abercrombie uses the word real perhaps he means objective ; but in its broadest meaning reality is not merely an ...
Contents
THE THIRD MARQUESS OF SALISBURY AS EMPIRE | 14 |
BRITISH CHURCHES AND FOREIGN AFFAIRS RELA | 28 |
The Centrality of Chesterton | 43 |
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