Toward Today: A Collection of English and American Essays Presenting the Earlier Development of Ideas Fundamental in Modern Life and LiteratureErich Albert Walter Scott, Foresman, 1938 - Всего страниц: 495 |
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Стр. 34
... human affairs are , and have always been , in an almost desperate state — it is owing to a quality of the human mind , the source of everything respect- able in man either as an intellectual or as a moral being , namely , that his er ...
... human affairs are , and have always been , in an almost desperate state — it is owing to a quality of the human mind , the source of everything respect- able in man either as an intellectual or as a moral being , namely , that his er ...
Стр. 118
... human , which is apparently stationary , going on in exactly the same way from year to year , and he applies that to tell us how to deal with the changing char- acters of human nature and human society . How is it that experience of ...
... human , which is apparently stationary , going on in exactly the same way from year to year , and he applies that to tell us how to deal with the changing char- acters of human nature and human society . How is it that experience of ...
Стр. 278
... human life sub- limed by thought , shall reappear in concrete forms as beauty . This being so , the logical criticism of art demands that we should not only estimate the technical skill of an artist and his faculty for presenting beauty ...
... human life sub- limed by thought , shall reappear in concrete forms as beauty . This being so , the logical criticism of art demands that we should not only estimate the technical skill of an artist and his faculty for presenting beauty ...
Содержание
Sir Thomas More | 1 |
Concerning the Government of England | 11 |
from PAST AND PRESENT | 28 |
Авторские права | |
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artist beauty believe better body Byron called cause century chalk character Christian common criticism Deerslayer doctrine Domrémy E. V. Lucas earth emotion English essay evil existence experience eyes fact feel fire Francis Bacon give Goethe Greek ground hand happy hath Henry Watson Fowler human John Milton Joseph Addison kind knowledge labor language learned less light live look mankind mathematical matter Matthew Arnold means ment Michel de Montaigne mind modern moral nation nature ness never observed opinion passion perhaps person philosophy Plato pleasure poems poet poetry present produce reader reason Samuel Johnson scientific sense soul speak species spirit supposed tell Theophrastus things Thomas Carlyle Thomas Henry Huxley thou thought tion true truth ture virtue whole words writing