A Revolution in European Poetry, 1660-1900Columbia University Press, 1940 - 279 pages |
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Page 77
... uncon- cerned with a literary audience that they had been published only at the urgence and the expense of two admirers . Self- educated , William Blake had escaped the current models of the Popian school and had steeped himself in the ...
... uncon- cerned with a literary audience that they had been published only at the urgence and the expense of two admirers . Self- educated , William Blake had escaped the current models of the Popian school and had steeped himself in the ...
Page 144
... uncon- scious assimilation from childhood . With an instinct as sure as Winckelmann's , Leopardi taught himself Greek in order to read the thronged volumes in his father's library , stocked at bargain rates from monasteries dissolved by ...
... uncon- scious assimilation from childhood . With an instinct as sure as Winckelmann's , Leopardi taught himself Greek in order to read the thronged volumes in his father's library , stocked at bargain rates from monasteries dissolved by ...
Page 249
... uncon- scious that revealed survivals of the primitive beneath the layers of civilization . Thus they conquered a new province for poetry . But they left the entrance open only to initiates . In defiance of the triumphs of material ...
... uncon- scious that revealed survivals of the primitive beneath the layers of civilization . Thus they conquered a new province for poetry . But they left the entrance open only to initiates . In defiance of the triumphs of material ...
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