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One passage in the poem that would seem to have Wycherley in mind is that contained in lines 289-304 , where ... One glaring Chaos and wild heap of wit ' - an extraordinarily apt description of Wycherley's Miscellany Poems of 1704 .
One passage in the poem that would seem to have Wycherley in mind is that contained in lines 289-304 , where ... One glaring Chaos and wild heap of wit ' - an extraordinarily apt description of Wycherley's Miscellany Poems of 1704 .
Seite 305
Johnson discriminates three meanings of wit , corresponding to the three sources from which poetic effects arise - the language of a poem , its thoughts , and the objects which it represents . The first gives Pope's definition of wit ...
Johnson discriminates three meanings of wit , corresponding to the three sources from which poetic effects arise - the language of a poem , its thoughts , and the objects which it represents . The first gives Pope's definition of wit ...
Seite 315
poem possible . Literature as process , being based on an irregular and unpredictable coincidence of sound - patterns , tends to seek the brief or even the fragmentary utterance , in other words to centre itself on the lyric , which ...
poem possible . Literature as process , being based on an irregular and unpredictable coincidence of sound - patterns , tends to seek the brief or even the fragmentary utterance , in other words to centre itself on the lyric , which ...
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Inhalt
THE ESSAY ON CRITICIS M | 42 |
POPE SEEN THROUGH HIS LETTERS | 62 |
THE BACKGROUND OF THE ATTACK | 68 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Addison appear beauty become called character common concerned course criticism Crusoe diction economic effect eighteenth century England English Essay evil example existence experience expression eyes fact feel Fielding friends give hand heart human idea imagination important individual interest Johnson kind King labour later least less letters LIBRARY light lines literary literature Lives London look manner matter means metaphor mind moral nature never object observe once original passage passions perfect perhaps philosophy pleasure poem poetic poetry poets political Pope Pope's possible present principle produce reader reason remark satire seems sense social society spirit style sublime Swift theory things thought tradition true turn UNIVERSITY whole writing written wrote