The Poets and Their Critics: Blake to Browning, by H. S. DaviesHutchinson Educational, 1960 |
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Сторінка 164
... tion ... purely and pre - eminently a visionary . Much beauty , exceeding splendour of diction and imagery , cannot but be perceived in his poetry , as well as exquisite charms of versifica- tion ; and a reader of an apprehensive fancy ...
... tion ... purely and pre - eminently a visionary . Much beauty , exceeding splendour of diction and imagery , cannot but be perceived in his poetry , as well as exquisite charms of versifica- tion ; and a reader of an apprehensive fancy ...
Сторінка 192
... tion and remarks alone remain . He considered these philoso- phical views of mind and nature to be instinct with the intensest spirit of poetry . ' From these scattered fragments and observa- tions , and from many passages read in their ...
... tion and remarks alone remain . He considered these philoso- phical views of mind and nature to be instinct with the intensest spirit of poetry . ' From these scattered fragments and observa- tions , and from many passages read in their ...
Сторінка 205
... tion ; and his last noble fragment , Hyperion , is not faultless , - but it is nearly so . Imagination and Fancy 1844 CROKER Reviewers have been sometimes accused of not reading the works which they affect to criticise . On the present ...
... tion ; and his last noble fragment , Hyperion , is not faultless , - but it is nearly so . Imagination and Fancy 1844 CROKER Reviewers have been sometimes accused of not reading the works which they affect to criticise . On the present ...
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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