The Romantic PoetsHutchinson's University Library, 1953 - 200 стор. |
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Сторінка 31
... soul and purpose of its own , linked inevitably with the human soul and its purposes . Wordsworth is not writing as a philosopher - he does not set out to explain this relation- ship , and we do not know whether he sees the soul of the ...
... soul and purpose of its own , linked inevitably with the human soul and its purposes . Wordsworth is not writing as a philosopher - he does not set out to explain this relation- ship , and we do not know whether he sees the soul of the ...
Сторінка 130
... soul " . Vain because it was the voice of his own soul , incapable of actual embodiment - a notion which the romantic poets never succeed in grasping . For Shelley the search went on throughout his life and its predestinate im ...
... soul " . Vain because it was the voice of his own soul , incapable of actual embodiment - a notion which the romantic poets never succeed in grasping . For Shelley the search went on throughout his life and its predestinate im ...
Сторінка 173
... soul , not recognized as a goddess in the classic Greek mythology . But neither is she the soul in the Christian sense . The absence of any specifically Christian feeling , indeed of any kind of orientation to Christianity , is ...
... soul , not recognized as a goddess in the classic Greek mythology . But neither is she the soul in the Christian sense . The absence of any specifically Christian feeling , indeed of any kind of orientation to Christianity , is ...
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Загальні терміни та фрази
actual Aeschylus Alastor Ancient Mariner appears attempt beauty become Berkeley blank verse Byron CALIFORNIA LIBRARY canto Childe Harold Coleridge Coleridge's conscious criticism death Don Juan eighteenth century Elegy emotional Endymion English Excursion experience fancy Fanny Brawne feeling fragment Godwin Gray Gray's happiness heart historical human Hyperion I. A. Richards ibid ideal imagery images imagination intellectual Keats Keats's kind Kubla Khan language later liberal lines literary living Lycidas Lyrical Ballads Mary Shelley Milton mind moral nature never object obscure passages passion perhaps philosophical pleasure poem poet's poetry political preface Prelude Prometheus prose Queen Mab revolution revolutionary Romantic poets seems sense sensuous sentiment Shelley Shelley's society sonnets soul spirit spring stanza style symbol theme things thought Tintern Abbey tion traditional truth UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA verse whole Words Wordsworth Wordsworth and Coleridge Wordsworthian worth's writing written