The Poets and Their Critics: Blake to Browning, by H. S. DaviesHutchinson Educational, 1960 |
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Сторінка 9
... criticism written on his poetry seemed to be either unin- structive or incapable of being included in this particular collection . His quality was recognized at once , and described in terms which left little more to later critics than ...
... criticism written on his poetry seemed to be either unin- structive or incapable of being included in this particular collection . His quality was recognized at once , and described in terms which left little more to later critics than ...
Сторінка 10
... criticism on most of these poets . It is not , of course , that criticism came to an end in about 1910. It did , however , direct the best of its energies elsewhere , to the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries . The Romantics concerned ...
... criticism on most of these poets . It is not , of course , that criticism came to an end in about 1910. It did , however , direct the best of its energies elsewhere , to the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries . The Romantics concerned ...
Сторінка 17
... criticism , but even more extreme in its impression of blank neglect and incomprehension on the part of an age which ... criticism and scholarship often returns to the obviously fairer and sounder task of taking both together , as Blake ...
... criticism , but even more extreme in its impression of blank neglect and incomprehension on the part of an age which ... criticism and scholarship often returns to the obviously fairer and sounder task of taking both together , as Blake ...
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The Poets and Their Critics: Blake to Browning, by H. S. Davies Hugh Sykes Davies Перегляд фрагмента - 1962 |
Загальні терміни та фрази
admiration Alfred Tennyson artist beauty Blackwood's Magazine Blake Browning Browning's called character charm Coleridge criticism delight Don Juan doubt Edinburgh Review emotion Endymion English poet English poetry expression eyes faculty fancy feeling genius gift give Goethe heart human ideas imagery images imagination impression inspiration intellectual interest Keats kind language least Leigh Hunt less Letter lines literary living Locksley Hall Lord Byron Lyrical Ballads means Milton mind modern mood moral nature never noble object passages passion perception Percy Bysshe Shelley perfect perhaps philosophy pleasure poems poet poet's poetic poetry present prose R. W. Dixon reader rhyme Romantic seems sense sentiment Shakespeare Shelley Shelley's Songs of Innocence soul spirit stanza style sympathy taste Tennyson things thought tion true truth utterance verse vision volume whole William Blake words Wordsworth write written