The Oral Study of LiteratureF. S. Crofts & Company, 1932 - 483 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 71
Page 46
... reason to learn what is good and what is bad and they act according to this knowledge ; the other act as they want to and then they use their reason to prove that that which they did was good and that which they didn't do was bad . * By ...
... reason to learn what is good and what is bad and they act according to this knowledge ; the other act as they want to and then they use their reason to prove that that which they did was good and that which they didn't do was bad . * By ...
Page 191
... reason excuses them on the account of this necessity . Reason does even a little more ; and it is all she can do . She gives the best direction possible to the absurdity . Thus she directs those who must believe because they cannot know ...
... reason excuses them on the account of this necessity . Reason does even a little more ; and it is all she can do . She gives the best direction possible to the absurdity . Thus she directs those who must believe because they cannot know ...
Page 454
... reasons ; and at the bottom of every reason lies an illustration . An illustration , thus , is what may be called a dramatized reason ; a reason is what may be called a generalization from an illustration , a proof existing in statement ...
... reasons ; and at the bottom of every reason lies an illustration . An illustration , thus , is what may be called a dramatized reason ; a reason is what may be called a generalization from an illustration , a proof existing in statement ...
Contents
PREFACE INTRODUCTION | 1 |
PASSAGES FOR READING AND STUDY | 39 |
Assertion and Implication | 433 |
Copyright | |
14 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
A. C. SWINBURNE ALFRED LORD TENNYSON ARTHUR HUGH CLOUGH assertion beauty breath Cæsar CLARENCE DAY consciousness dark dead death Dionysus divine doth dream earth emotional emphasis eternal eyes fact fear feel flowers give glory grow H. L. MENCKEN hand happy hath hear heart heaven hope human ideas immortal king Knopf Lady of Shalott LEO TOLSTOI light literary live look LORD man's MATTHEW ARNOLD means mind moral nature never night o'er Odysseus once oral passion permission of Charles person poets poor published by Alfred reader reason religion rest ROBERT BROWNING sense sentence silent sing slave sleep song soul speak spirit stars student sweet tears thee thine things thought tion to-day truth voice whole wild WILFRED SCAWEN BLUNT WILLIAM WILLIAM WORDSWORTH wind words writer wrong youth