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The nature of poetic truth, and of the belief claimed by poetry, has become for many thinkers a question of keener interest through the discussions of Dr. I. A. Richards. In a recent article in this Journal,1 Dr. Helen Wodehouse has expressed her own view, elicited in relation to that of Dr. Richards, concerning truth in poetry. She urges that “a great poem seems sometimes centrally to be showing us the full measure and nature of some aspect of the actual world.” Our response involves essentially an element of belief in something revealed as rooted in reality, laying necessity upon the poet; even though that belief may not attach to all that the poet accepted as fact, and though we may be unable to formulate in reflective terms the nature of the truth discerned.
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- Copyright © The Royal Institute of Philosophy 1935
References
page 467 Note 1 “Poetry and Truth,” Philosophy, VIII, p. 32.Google Scholar
page 468 Note 1 The English Muse, 1933, pp. 238–9.
page 468 Note 2 Reason or Beauty in the Poetic Mind, 1933, p. 100.
page 468 Note 3 The Epic, 1922, p. 105.
page 468 Note 4 Sewell, A, The Physiology of Beauty, 1931.Google Scholar
page 469 Note 1 Principles of Literary Criticism, 1926, pp. 113, 132.
page 469 Note 2 See Essay IV, “The Objective Reality of Perspectives,” in The Philosophy of the Present, by Mead, G. H.. Edited by Murphy, A. E., Chicago. London, 1932.Google Scholar
page 470 Note 1 Philosophy, VIII, 29, p. 35.
page 470 Note 2 Science and the Modern World, 1932, p. 23.
page 470 Note 3 Ibid., p. 108.
page 470 Note 4 Adventures of Ideas, Part I, Ch. II.
page 471 Note 1 Process and Reality, passim.
page 472 Note 1 The Modern Theme, by Ortega, J.Gasset, Y., 1931.Google Scholar
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