The Pelican Guide to English Literature, Volume 5Penguin Books, 1957 |
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Page 91
... vision of it ; while the rapidity with which his mood . changes adds to our impression of something insubstantial and de- lusory about the vision it evokes . Nor is it accidental that the tale ends with the lover retracing the whole of ...
... vision of it ; while the rapidity with which his mood . changes adds to our impression of something insubstantial and de- lusory about the vision it evokes . Nor is it accidental that the tale ends with the lover retracing the whole of ...
Page 92
... vision as compared with the superbly realized concreteness of the poet's presentation of the objective reality . For Crabbe , moreover , the theme has ( characteristically ) more serious aspect . During the first part of his journey the ...
... vision as compared with the superbly realized concreteness of the poet's presentation of the objective reality . For Crabbe , moreover , the theme has ( characteristically ) more serious aspect . During the first part of his journey the ...
Page 255
... Vision of Judgment , Byron's third poem in ottava rima , was written in 1821 , during an interval in the composition of Don Juan . George III had died early in the previous year , old , blind , and insane . In the spring of 1821 , the ...
... Vision of Judgment , Byron's third poem in ottava rima , was written in 1821 , during an interval in the composition of Don Juan . George III had died early in the previous year , old , blind , and insane . In the spring of 1821 , the ...
Table des matières
BORIS FORD | 7 |
D W HARDING | 67 |
FRANK WHITEHEAD | 85 |
Droits d'auteur | |
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Expressions et termes fréquents
achievement artist attitude Augustan Biographia Blake's Blunden Burns's Byron Cambridge character Charles Lamb Coleridge Coleridge's contemporary contrast Crabbe criticism death Edinburgh effect Eighteenth Century emotional England English poetry essay experience expression F. R. Leavis Fanny feeling George Crabbe Godwin H. W. Garrod Hazlitt human ideas imagination interest irony Jane Austen John Clare John Keats Juan judgement Keats Keats's kind Kubla Khan Lamb Lamb's landscape language later Letters lines literary living London Lord Mansfield Park Milton mind moral natural objects Nineteenth Century novels Oxford painter passage Peacock period poem poet poet's poetic poetry political Pride and Prejudice prose published Quincey Quincey's reader reading Robert Southey Romantic satiric Scots Scott seems sense sensibility sentiment Shakespeare Shelley Shelley's social society Southey spirit stanza symbolic theme things Thomas thought tion verse vision vols whole William Blake words Wordsworth writing wrote