Keats and EmbarrassmentClarendon Press, 1974 - 224 páginas In this acclaimed book, Professor Ricks argues for the importance of embarrassment in human life and for the value works of art which help us deal with embarrassment by recognizing and refining it. As a poet and a man, Keats was especially sensitive to, and morally intelligent about, embarrassment. This study demonstrates the particular direction of his insight and moral concern to acknowledge embarrassability and its involvement in important moral concerns. |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 69
Página 9
... lines about Niobe is not simply or solely a matter of their presenting a real anguish , and we need to ask just what ' almost too painful ' means here . What animates the lines is a particular recognition about an abandonment to grief ...
... lines about Niobe is not simply or solely a matter of their presenting a real anguish , and we need to ask just what ' almost too painful ' means here . What animates the lines is a particular recognition about an abandonment to grief ...
Página 12
... lines themselves is devoted to intima- tions of embarrassment ; so it is as a relief from embarrassment that this is made explicit - nine lines later , with the coolness that shades a blush within the pathetic fallacy : " The creeper ...
... lines themselves is devoted to intima- tions of embarrassment ; so it is as a relief from embarrassment that this is made explicit - nine lines later , with the coolness that shades a blush within the pathetic fallacy : " The creeper ...
Página 16
... lines ' ( I add the three lines introductory ) : Add too , the sweetness Of thy honied voice ; the neatness Of thine ankle lightly turn'd : With those beauties , scarce discern'd , Kept with such sweet privacy , That they seldom meet ...
... lines ' ( I add the three lines introductory ) : Add too , the sweetness Of thy honied voice ; the neatness Of thine ankle lightly turn'd : With those beauties , scarce discern'd , Kept with such sweet privacy , That they seldom meet ...
Contenido
INTRODUCTORY | 1 |
KEATS AND BLUSHING | 19 |
DARWIN BLUSHING AND LOVE | 50 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Términos y frases comunes
admiration Agnes ambivalence Bailey beauty bliss blood blush breast Brown Burgess Byron Charles Cowden Clarke cheek contemplate cool creative Critical Heritage Darwin delight Dilke disconcerting distaste eating embar embarrassment emotion Endymion erotic Erythrophobia Eve of St eyes face Fall of Hyperion Fanny Brawne flush forehead George and Georgiana Georgiana Keats give hand happiness honey human humour Hyperion imagination innocence John Keats Keats's letters Keats's lines Keats's poetry Keats's sense kiss lady Lamia lips literature look love's lovers matter mind mouth natural never nipple pain paradox pathetic fallacy perhaps physical pleasure poem poet possibility practical joke prurience recognition relation Reynolds rhyme rich Robert Gittings sensation Sept sexual shame simply Sleep and Poetry slimy soft sooth speak sweet sympathy thing thought tion Tom Keats true truth unembarrassability Walter Jackson Bate warm wish woman Woodhouse word writing young
Referencias a este libro
Humiliation: And Other Essays on Honor, Social Discomfort, and Violence William Ian Miller Vista previa limitada - 1993 |
The Loaded Table : Representations of Food in Roman Literature ... Emily Gowers Vista previa limitada - 1993 |