Academic DiscourseJohn Jacob Enck |
Contents
INTRODUCTION TO THE DISCOURSE | 1 |
Edmund Wilson | 24 |
W H Auden | 39 |
Copyright | |
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aesthetic Allen Tate American ancient appear architect architecture Aristotelian artist Augustine beauty become believe Bernard biographer Boethius called Chartres Churchill Cistercian classical concept culture detective story dream essay example experience fact feel French Freud gangster Gothic Gothic architecture Greek Holmes human humanists I. A. Richards idea illiteracy imagination important influence intellectual interest Italian Italy ivory tower Jane Jacobs kind knowledge Latin less literature mass society matter means medieval merely Middle Ages mind modern moral murder musical Nabataean nature never novel perhaps Petrarch philosophy Platonic poem poet poetry political possible problem R. P. Blackmur reader reality Renaissance rhetoric Roman Sainte-Beuve scholars scholarship scholasticism seems sense Sherlock Holmes social T. S. Eliot things thought tion tradition true truth understand universal Vigny W. H. Auden Witelo word writing