A Revolution in European Poetry, 1660-1900Columbia University Press, 1940 - 279 pages |
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Page viii
... poetry of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries , in which the chief movements were French and German and the greatest figure was not British . Yet since English is the first , and because of language barriers frequently the only ...
... poetry of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries , in which the chief movements were French and German and the greatest figure was not British . Yet since English is the first , and because of language barriers frequently the only ...
Page 41
... poetic , unspoiled by the abstractions of maturity and the rigid conventions of age . German poetry could spring to life by ceasing to model itself after the South , by resuming contact with the spoken language and the Teutonic ...
... poetic , unspoiled by the abstractions of maturity and the rigid conventions of age . German poetry could spring to life by ceasing to model itself after the South , by resuming contact with the spoken language and the Teutonic ...
Page 85
... poetic diction but also the best subjects for poetry ; that " there never is , nor can be , any essential difference between the language of prose and metrical composition " ; and that " all good poetry is the spontaneous overflow of ...
... poetic diction but also the best subjects for poetry ; that " there never is , nor can be , any essential difference between the language of prose and metrical composition " ; and that " all good poetry is the spontaneous overflow of ...
Table des matières
Tradition and Reason | 1 |
The Voice of the North | 36 |
Joy in Commonalty Spread | 87 |
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Expressions et termes fréquents
ancient Ange plein antique aristocratic Arnold ballad Baudelaire beauty Blake Boileau born British Byron century Christian Coleridge contemporary court culture death drama dreams earth emotion Empedocles England English eternal Europe eyes faith fate Faust feeling France French genius German Giacomo Leopardi Goethe Goethe's Greece Greek heart Heine Hellenic Herder Hölderlin Homer Hugo Hugo's human imagination IMPORTANT EVENTS SOURCES intellectual Italian Italy Keats Keats's Lamartine language Leconte de Lisle Leopardi literary literature living Louis Louis XIV Lyrical Ballads Matthew Arnold Mephistopheles mind Molière Napoleon nature noble Novalis pain Paris passion Pindar poems poet's poetic poets political Pope primitive prose Racine Revolution rhyme Rimbaud rococo Rome Schiller sense Shakespeare Shelley Shelley's social song soul SOURCES OF IDEAS spirit style symbolic taste Tennyson theme thou thought tion tragedy translation uncon universe Verlaine verse Victor Hugo Vigny vocabulary Voltaire Weimar Winckelmann Wordsworth youth