John KeatsTwayne, 1981 - 194 páginas A comprehensive and scholarly account of the poet's works. |
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Página 40
... reasoning in which one point develops logically from the previous one , for what Keats calls " consequitive reasoning , " of which he writes as follows : " I have never yet been able to perceive how any thing can be known for truth by ...
... reasoning in which one point develops logically from the previous one , for what Keats calls " consequitive reasoning , " of which he writes as follows : " I have never yet been able to perceive how any thing can be known for truth by ...
Página 42
... reasoning , with the carefully qualifying “ perhaps , " and with its appeal to an indeterminate " sense of Beauty , " provides another example of the negatively capable attitude which Keats already exhibited in the letter to Bailey and ...
... reasoning , with the carefully qualifying “ perhaps , " and with its appeal to an indeterminate " sense of Beauty , " provides another example of the negatively capable attitude which Keats already exhibited in the letter to Bailey and ...
Página 48
... reasoning by his own reasoning and acknowledges the compromise of Bailey's " complex Mind " which " would exist partly on sensation partly on thought " ( I , 186 ) . Philosophy is never merely abstract thought for a poet who judges ...
... reasoning by his own reasoning and acknowledges the compromise of Bailey's " complex Mind " which " would exist partly on sensation partly on thought " ( I , 186 ) . Philosophy is never merely abstract thought for a poet who judges ...
Contenido
About the Author | 8 |
Introduction | 15 |
The Letters | 32 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Términos y frases comunes
Agnes Apollo Apollonius aspiration Autumn Bate beauty becomes Belle Dame bower consciousness consecutive reasoning contrast convey critics Cynthia death dream earth earthly Endymion ephemerality eternal Eve of St experience expression Fall of Hyperion fancy Fanny Brawne feel figures flowers fulfillment goddess Grecian Urn happy harvest human identity immortal inspired Isabella John Keats Keats Circle Keats-Shelley Journal Keats's Keats's poetry Keatsian Lamia letter to Bailey London lovers Lycius Madeline Madeline's Miltonic mind Moneta mortal Murry mutability mystery myth natural process negative capability Nightingale Oceanus Ode on Indolence Ode on Melancholy Ode to Psyche pain paradox passage passion Pettet pleasure poem's poet poet's poetic quest reality realm Reynolds ripening Romantic Saturn scene sensation sense Sleep and Poetry song sonnet sorrow soul-making Sperry Stillinger stood tip-toe suggests symbolic theme things thought timeless tion Titans transience truth of Imagination verse vision whereas words Wordsworth writes