Yearbook of Comparative Criticism, Volume 4Joseph Strelka |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 31
Page 116
... close to that of the Old Testament to allow for anything approaching verbal humor . Instead we stagger from the buffeting of a flood of Biblical references and from the cosmic sweep of Gabriel's leaping imagination . Gabriel lives in ...
... close to that of the Old Testament to allow for anything approaching verbal humor . Instead we stagger from the buffeting of a flood of Biblical references and from the cosmic sweep of Gabriel's leaping imagination . Gabriel lives in ...
Page 145
... close relationship in his last years with the daughter of a Polish rabbi of Chassidic background . Then , strangely but precisely , there are mystical overtones , too , in the work of the novelist Virginia Woolf , daughter of the ...
... close relationship in his last years with the daughter of a Polish rabbi of Chassidic background . Then , strangely but precisely , there are mystical overtones , too , in the work of the novelist Virginia Woolf , daughter of the ...
Page 245
... close to the magnificence of our planet . It is true : Ḥasidism is mere pretext for the intellectual conceits of Regelson . But the pre - eminent triad of the poets in the twenties of our century— Gruenberg , Shlonsky , Lamdan ...
... close to the magnificence of our planet . It is true : Ḥasidism is mere pretext for the intellectual conceits of Regelson . But the pre - eminent triad of the poets in the twenties of our century— Gruenberg , Shlonsky , Lamdan ...
Contents
PREFACE | 1 |
LE CRI DE MERLIN OR INTERPRETATION | 9 |
THE MUSE AS A SYMBOL OF LITERARY | 36 |
Copyright | |
13 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
African appears become beginning body bring called century Chuang close comes concept consciousness considered creative criticism culture dance darkness death described divine dreams example existence experience expression fact feeling gods hand Hasidism heart human idea imagination important India influence inner interpretation Islamic kind language later light literary literature living London means metaphor mind movement muse mystery mystical myth nature never Notes object original Persian phenomenal philosophical poem poet poetry possible present pure Rabbi reached reality refers reflection relation religious remains represented seems seen sense shows songs soul sound spiritual stage story symbol things thinking thought tion tradition translation tree Tristan true truth turn unconscious unity universe verse vision West whole writers writing York