The Pelican Guide to English Literature, Volume 5Penguin Books, 1957 |
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Page 57
... ment to establish itself and secures her own moral autonomy . Moral autonomy is a striking feature of Jane Austen's heroines ; although she never fails to pay tribute to the vital importance of sound upbringing and the early inculcation ...
... ment to establish itself and secures her own moral autonomy . Moral autonomy is a striking feature of Jane Austen's heroines ; although she never fails to pay tribute to the vital importance of sound upbringing and the early inculcation ...
Page 92
... ment upon a dominant Romantic trend will bear a good deal of pon- dering . In addition , it offers a clue to the sources of the energy and tension which characterize all Crabbe's mature poetry , qualities which 92 PART THREE.
... ment upon a dominant Romantic trend will bear a good deal of pon- dering . In addition , it offers a clue to the sources of the energy and tension which characterize all Crabbe's mature poetry , qualities which 92 PART THREE.
Page 122
... ment of natural goodness and generosity . He is no less conscious of his lack of weight and solidity ; his intense courtship of Fanny is , we may say , his effort to add the gravity of principle to his merely natural goodness . He ...
... ment of natural goodness and generosity . He is no less conscious of his lack of weight and solidity ; his intense courtship of Fanny is , we may say , his effort to add the gravity of principle to his merely natural goodness . He ...
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