Papers on Shelley, Wordsworth & OthersH. Milford, Oxford University Press, 1929 - 171 pages |
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Page 23
... feeling in the passion of those , or that there would have been , but that the metre creates an indistinct perception , is to say that which is not true . In Shakespeare's or in Keats's prose ( what beautiful prose it would have been ...
... feeling in the passion of those , or that there would have been , but that the metre creates an indistinct perception , is to say that which is not true . In Shakespeare's or in Keats's prose ( what beautiful prose it would have been ...
Page 45
... feeling may have as its generating subject some thing or some one out- side themselves ; but the feeling itself is in them- selves . There was nothing definite enough either of seeing or feeling in Coleridge himself ( I ought to say ...
... feeling may have as its generating subject some thing or some one out- side themselves ; but the feeling itself is in them- selves . There was nothing definite enough either of seeing or feeling in Coleridge himself ( I ought to say ...
Page 118
... feeling that man has for nature , a feeling impartial , receptive , kindly , un- critical , like that of an open - eyed child . He was never tired by the repetition of the same sight , human or natural . He never tired of the sights of ...
... feeling that man has for nature , a feeling impartial , receptive , kindly , un- critical , like that of an open - eyed child . He was never tired by the repetition of the same sight , human or natural . He never tired of the sights of ...
Table des matières
Shelley and Francis Thompson | 1 |
Wordsworth | 19 |
Coleridge | 39 |
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Expressions et termes fréquents
appearance Arnold beauty becomes begin believe better born bright Browning child Coleridge comes common contemporary critic dark dead deep earth effect emotion English equal experience expression eyes face fact feeling field flower follow give given greater greatest poetry grow hand heart heaven hold hope human imagery imagination interest judge Keats kind known language least leaves less light lines living long poem look man's matter mean metre mind moved nature never night once passed passion perhaps persons play poem poet poet's poetic question revealed round secret seems seen sense Shakespeare Shelley Shelley's short song soul sound speak spirit story tell Tennyson thee theme things Thompson thou thought true understanding verse Whitman whole wind Wordsworth write written wrote young