Centring the Self: Subjectivity, Society, and Reading from Thomas Gray to Thomas HardyScolar Press, 1995 - 273 стор. These essays focus primarily on the theme of selfhood and subjective experience in the poetry of the British Romantic period, and in the later poetry and novels that were its legacy. There are chapters on Gray, Cowper, Wordsworth, Coleridge, Keats, Shelley, Byron, Hardy and George Eliot - writers who, though often having a strong interest in public affairs, all turned inwards to make trial of imagination and the individual life as sources of order and value against a background of cultural unsettlement. The book moves from the emergence of post-Enlightenment psychological man to the proto-modernist preoccupation with the self as construct in Byron and Hardy. |
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Сторінка 102
... Keats's low birth , and to the ' uneducated ' apprentice apothecary who seems to have caught an infection from some patient afflicted with ' poetical mania ' . Such abuse is of course the negative reverse of the recognition of an ...
... Keats's low birth , and to the ' uneducated ' apprentice apothecary who seems to have caught an infection from some patient afflicted with ' poetical mania ' . Such abuse is of course the negative reverse of the recognition of an ...
Сторінка 119
... Keats's characteristic beauties are simply unsuitable for pronouncing on ' the realities of life ' ; Wordsworth's ' The World is too much with us ' is not out of place , for it is ' a high animation to noble thoughts ' and anathematizes ...
... Keats's characteristic beauties are simply unsuitable for pronouncing on ' the realities of life ' ; Wordsworth's ' The World is too much with us ' is not out of place , for it is ' a high animation to noble thoughts ' and anathematizes ...
Сторінка 167
... Keats's poetry in a series of letters during 1821. Byron had previously expressed contempt for Keats , in a language that outdoes even the notorious diatribes of the Tory reviewers who lambasted this radical upstart as ( in John Gibson ...
... Keats's poetry in a series of letters during 1821. Byron had previously expressed contempt for Keats , in a language that outdoes even the notorious diatribes of the Tory reviewers who lambasted this radical upstart as ( in John Gibson ...
Зміст
William Cowper and the Condition of England | 19 |
Cowpers The Castaway | 33 |
Wordsworth Bunyan and the Puritan Mind | 69 |
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actual apparent beauty becomes brings Byron calls Canto Castaway Chapter Childe Harold claims close comes condition course Cowper creative Critical dark death desire despair divine dream edition effect English eternal event example existence experience expression fact faith fear feeling figure final force give grace Gray hand heart hope human hymns idea ideal imagination individual interest interpretation John Jude Julian and Maddalo Keats Keats's language least less Letters light limits lines living London meaning mind nature never objects once Oxford past poem poet poet's poetic poetry political present Prose Puritan question reader reading reference relation remains represents response Romantic seems sense Shelley Shelley's soul spirit stands stanza suffering suggests takes talk things thou thought true truth turn universe vision whole Wordsworth