University of Toronto Quarterly, Volume 2University of Toronto Press, 1932 - Canada |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 57
Page 36
... poem whose key- note is pleasure , the fact of human suffering should be so prominent . Internal evidence bears out to some extent the tradition that Lucretius wrote the poem in the lucid intervals of insanity . Be that as it may ...
... poem whose key- note is pleasure , the fact of human suffering should be so prominent . Internal evidence bears out to some extent the tradition that Lucretius wrote the poem in the lucid intervals of insanity . Be that as it may ...
Page 37
... poets of all literature . For the De Rerum Natura is not simply a scientific treatise with a moral , written in ... poem that a lyrical pitch should be sustained throughout . Nor is there any reason why the content of science and ...
... poets of all literature . For the De Rerum Natura is not simply a scientific treatise with a moral , written in ... poem that a lyrical pitch should be sustained throughout . Nor is there any reason why the content of science and ...
Page 145
... poem , in one of them by name . Other passages in the poem not only show that Milton was familiar with the new astronomy , but incline one to think that it was more consonant with his reason than the older theory . Still , even if he ...
... poem , in one of them by name . Other passages in the poem not only show that Milton was familiar with the new astronomy , but incline one to think that it was more consonant with his reason than the older theory . Still , even if he ...
Contents
1932 No | 2 |
The Crisis in the Far East NORMAN MACKENZIE | 3 |
D C TAIT | 21 |
26 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
achieved Alexander Carlyle American amour-propre artist atoms beauty British Canada Canadian Carlyle character China civilization classical College comedy criticism Doll's House economic eighteenth century Eliot Empire England English Epicurus epigrams fact feel force Geetiks genius Goldwin Smith Herrick Hulme human Ibsen idea ideal industry intellectual interest Laodamia Latin League literary literature living Lucretius Marivaux material matter ment mind modern Molière moral Mozart Museum native nature never Newton Ontario passion perhaps philosophy plays poem poet poetry political problems Professor prose Proust reader realize reason Roman Royal Ontario Museums Royal Society Salieri Sartor Sartor Resartus scientific Scott seems sense social soul spirit T. E. Hulme T. S. Eliot theme theory things thought tion to-day trade truth University of Toronto Vergil verse wages whole women words Wordsworth writing