Название: Rousseau and Romanticism
Автор: Babbitt Irving
Издательство: Public Domain
Жанр: Зарубежная классика
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1
See, for example, in vol. IX of the Annales de la Société Jean-Jacques Rousseau the bibliography (pp. 87-276) for 1912 – the year of the bicentenary.
2
Literature and the American College (1908); The New Laokoon (1910); The Masters of Modern French Criticism (1912).
3
See his Oxford address On the Modern Element in Literature.
4
These two tendencies in Occidental thought go back respectively at least as far as Parmenides and Heraclitus.
5
In his World as Imagination (1916) E. D. Fawcett, though ultra-romantic and unoriental in his point of view, deals with a problem that has always been the special preoccupation of the Hindu. A Hindu, however, would have entitled a similar volume The World as Illusion (māyā). Aristotle has much to say of fiction in his Poetics but does not even use the word imagination (φαντασία). In the Psychology, where he discusses the imagination, he assigns not to it, but to mind or reason the active and creative rôle (νοῦς ποιητικός). It is especially the notion of the creative imagination that is recent. The earliest example of the phrase that I have noted in French is in Rousseau’s description of his erotic reveries at the Hermitage (Confessions, Livre IX).
6
Essay on Flaubert in Essais de Psychologie contemporaine.
7
Le Romantisme et les mœurs (1910).
8
Annales de la Société Jean-Jacques Rousseau, VIII, 30-31.
9
I should perhaps say that in the case of Buddha
1
See, for example, in vol. IX of the
2
3
See his Oxford address
4
These two tendencies in Occidental thought go back respectively at least as far as Parmenides and Heraclitus.
5
In his
6
Essay on Flaubert in
7
8
9
I should perhaps say that in the case of Buddha I have been able to consult the original Pāli documents. In the case of Confucius and the Chinese I have had to depend on translations.
10
See appendix on Chinese primitivism.
11
See, for example,
12
Buddha expressed on many occasions his disdain for the
13
I have explained the reasons for giving this place to Bacon in chapter II of
14
15
I scarcely need remind the reader that the extant Aristotelian writings which have repelled so many by their form were almost certainly not meant for publication. For the problems raised by these writings as well as for the mystery in the method of their early transmission see R. Shute,
16
See his
17
Quoted in Grimm’s Dictionary.
18
Ex lectione quorundam romanticorum, i.e. librorum compositorum in gallico poeticorum de gestis militaribus, in quibus maxima pars fabulosa est.
19
Perhaps the most romantic lines in English are found in one of Camillo’s speeches in
a wild dedication of yourselves
To unpath’d waters, undream’d shores.
This “wild dedication” is, it should be noted, looked upon by Camillo with disfavor.
20
21
Thomas Shadwell, Preface to the
22