Sweetness and light (original) (raw)

About DBpedia

Sweetness and light is an English idiom that can be used in common speech, either as statement of personal happy consciousness, (though this may be viewed by natives as being a trifle in earnest) or as literal report on another person. Depending upon sense-of-humour, some may use the phrase with mild irony. For example: The two had been fighting for a month, but around others it was all sweetness and light. Esteemed humorous writer P. G. Wodehouse employed the phrase often, sometimes with a slight nod to the phrase's dual-edge. Originally, however, "sweetness and light" had a special use in literary and cultural criticism meaning "pleasing and instructive", which in classical theory was considered to be the aim and justification of poetry.

Property Value
dbo:abstract Sweetness and light is an English idiom that can be used in common speech, either as statement of personal happy consciousness, (though this may be viewed by natives as being a trifle in earnest) or as literal report on another person. Depending upon sense-of-humour, some may use the phrase with mild irony. For example: The two had been fighting for a month, but around others it was all sweetness and light. Esteemed humorous writer P. G. Wodehouse employed the phrase often, sometimes with a slight nod to the phrase's dual-edge. Originally, however, "sweetness and light" had a special use in literary and cultural criticism meaning "pleasing and instructive", which in classical theory was considered to be the aim and justification of poetry. Jonathan Swift first used the phrase in his mock-heroic prose satire, "The Battle of the Books" (1704), a defense of Classical learning, which he published as a prolegomenon to his A Tale of a Tub. It gained widespread currency in the Victorian era, when English poet and essayist Matthew Arnold picked it up as the title of the first section of his 1869 book Culture and Anarchy: An Essay in Political and Social Criticism, where "sweetness and light" stands for beauty and intelligence, the two key components of an excellent culture. (en)
dbo:wikiPageID 13693477 (xsd:integer)
dbo:wikiPageLength 8349 (xsd:nonNegativeInteger)
dbo:wikiPageRevisionID 1103419169 (xsd:integer)
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink dbr:Jonathan_Swift dbr:Culture_and_Anarchy dbr:Matthew_Arnold dbr:Quarrel_of_the_Ancients_and_the_Moderns dbr:Standing_on_the_shoulders_of_giants dbr:Idiom dbr:Irony dbr:Aesop dbr:P._G._Wodehouse dbr:Isaac_Newton dbr:A_Tale_of_a_Tub dbc:English-language_idioms dbr:Sir_William_Temple,_1st_Baronet dbr:Mark_Girouard dbr:Victorian_era dbr:The_Battle_of_the_Books dbr:Prolegomenon
dbp:wikiPageUsesTemplate dbt:About dbt:Reflist dbt:Short_description dbt:Wiktionary
dct:subject dbc:English-language_idioms
gold:hypernym dbr:Idiom
rdfs:comment Sweetness and light is an English idiom that can be used in common speech, either as statement of personal happy consciousness, (though this may be viewed by natives as being a trifle in earnest) or as literal report on another person. Depending upon sense-of-humour, some may use the phrase with mild irony. For example: The two had been fighting for a month, but around others it was all sweetness and light. Esteemed humorous writer P. G. Wodehouse employed the phrase often, sometimes with a slight nod to the phrase's dual-edge. Originally, however, "sweetness and light" had a special use in literary and cultural criticism meaning "pleasing and instructive", which in classical theory was considered to be the aim and justification of poetry. (en)
rdfs:label Sweetness and light (en)
owl:sameAs freebase:Sweetness and light wikidata:Sweetness and light https://global.dbpedia.org/id/4vjSs
prov:wasDerivedFrom wikipedia-en:Sweetness_and_light?oldid=1103419169&ns=0
foaf:isPrimaryTopicOf wikipedia-en:Sweetness_and_light
is dbo:wikiPageRedirects of dbr:Sweetness_and_Light
is dbo:wikiPageWikiLink of dbr:Jonathan_Swift dbr:Culture_and_Anarchy dbr:Matthew_Arnold dbr:Irreversible_binomial dbr:IMP_(TV_series) dbr:The_Battle_of_the_Books dbr:Sweetness_and_Light
is foaf:primaryTopic of wikipedia-en:Sweetness_and_light