| Brewster Ghiselin - 1985 - 278 דפים
...words the physical effect of pathos when the sense of the passage is blithe and gay ? I can only say, because they are poetry, and find their way to something...obscure and latent, something older than the present organisation of his nature, like the patches of fen which still linger here and there in the drained... | |
| Hugh Underhill - 1992 - 360 דפים
...need for 'truth of emotion' in poetry; and TS Eliot responded to its account of poetry finding its way 'to something in man which is obscure and latent, something older than the present organisation of his nature' (p. 46). These phrases might, after all, suggest Romantic primitivism,... | |
| Adam Phillips - 2009 - 398 דפים
...that would stand up when he was shaving - they were not to do with high culture. Lines of real poetry 'find their way to something in man which is obscure and latent, something older than the present organisation of his nature, like the patches of fen which still linger here and there in the drained... | |
| Martin Garrett - 2004 - 284 דפים
...the Leslie Stephen lecture of 1933 Housman told his large audience about poetry as emotion, appealing to "something in man which is obscure and latent, something older than the present organisation of his nature, like the patches of fen which still linger here and there in the drained... | |
| Robert Conquest - 2005 - 286 דפים
...satisfactory. To put it in terms of the arts, we might consider AE Housman's view that poetry finds its way "to something in man which is obscure and latent,...and there in the drained lands of Cambridgeshire." The rules of these profound and intricate unconscious activities are probably in practice unknowable.... | |
| Anthony David Nuttall - 2007 - 228 דפים
...sense of the passage is blithe and gay' . No reason can be given beyond the fact that such lines ' are poetry, and find their way to something in man...and there in the drained lands of Cambridgeshire' -87 But when Housman decides that the sense of the passage is happy, has he really exhausted the range... | |
| E. Tillyard - 1949 - 228 דפים
...Milton's Arcades, 'Nymphs and shepherds, dance no more'. These words, says AE Housman, have their powerful effect ' because they are poetry, and find their way...here and there in the drained lands of Cambridgeshire '. Where Housman differs from William James is in insisting on age, on qualities in man inherited from... | |
| 278 דפים
...words the physical effect of pathos when the sense of the passage is blithe and gay? I can only say, because they are poetry, and find their way to something...obscure and latent, something older than the present organisation of his nature, like the patches of fen which still linger here and there in the drained... | |
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