If there be any poem whose graces please because they are situated beyond the reach of art, and where the force and faculties of creative imagination delight, because they are unassisted and unrestrained by those of deliberate judgment, it is this. Observations on the Fairy Queen of Spenser - Page 16by Thomas Warton - 1762 - 270 pagesFull view - About this book
| Arthur Thomas Malkin - Biography - 1853 - 542 pages
...the cold approbation of the head. If there be any poem whose graces please, because they are situated beyond the reach of art ; and where the force and faculties of creative imagination delight, because they are unassisted and unrestrained by those of deliberate judgment, it is this : in reading... | |
| Raymond Macdonald Alden - English prose literature - 1911 - 744 pages
...the cold approbation of the head. If there be any poem whose graces please because they are situated beyond the reach of art, and where the force and faculties of creative imagination delight, because they are unassisted and unrestrained by those of deliberate judgment, it is this. In reading... | |
| Raymond Macdonald Alden - English prose literature - 1911 - 744 pages
...the cold approbation of the head. If there be any poem whose graces please because they are situated beyond the reach of art, and where the force and faculties of creative imagination delight, because they are unassisted and unrestrained by those of deliberate judgment, it is this. In reading... | |
| Raymond Macdonald Alden - English prose literature - 1911 - 754 pages
...the cold approbation of the head. If there be any poem whose graces please because they are situated beyond the reach of art, and where the force and faculties of creative imagination delight, because they are unassisted and unrestrained by those of deliberate judgment, it is this. In reading... | |
| George Morey Miller - Literary Criticism - 1913 - 176 pages
...sole criterion of excellence . . . If there be any poem, whose graces please because they are situated beyond the reach of art, and where the force and faculties of creative imagination delight, because they are unassisted and unrestrained by those of deliberate judgment, it is this" (I. 15 —... | |
| Modern Language Association of America - Languages, Modern - 1915 - 1054 pages
...the cold approbation of the head. If there be any poem whose graces please, because they are situated beyond the reach of art, and where the force and faculties of creative imagination 81 delight, because they are unas" i, p. 22. " i, p. 23. n Without the same precision in nomenclature... | |
| University of Illinois (Urbana-Champaign campus) - Language and languages - 1916 - 638 pages
...the cold approbation of the head. If there be any poem whose graces please, because they are situated beyond the reach of art, and where the force and faculties of creative imagination33 delight, because they are unassisted and unre. "Ibid. II, p. 72. 30Warton used the word... | |
| George Benjamin Woods - England - 1916 - 1604 pages
...the cold approbation of the head. If there be any poem whose graces please because they are situated beyond the reach of art, and where the force and faculties of creative imagine- 66 tion delight because they are unassisted "conformity to set rules (The eighteenth century... | |
| Electronic journals - 1928 - 540 pages
...cold approbation of the head. If there be any poem, whose graces please, because they are situated beyond the reach of art, and where the force and faculties of creative imagination delight, because they are unassisted and unrestrained by those of deliberate judgment, it is this." Such criticism... | |
| Thomas Warton - Chivalry in literature - 2001 - 320 pages
...cold approbation of the head. If there be any poem, whose graces please, because they are situated beyond the reach of art, and where the force and faculties of creative imagination delight, because they are unassisted and unrestrained by those of deliberate judgment, it is this. In reading... | |
| |