Poets in Their LettersOxford University Press, 1959 - 232 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 60
Página 17
... seem to forget the rest . Indeed , dear sir , when I'm seeming to do so , I forget none so much as I do myself and ... seems to declare his readiness to endow Swift with £ 100 a year , he remarked : ' Don't be angry ; I will not live ...
... seem to forget the rest . Indeed , dear sir , when I'm seeming to do so , I forget none so much as I do myself and ... seems to declare his readiness to endow Swift with £ 100 a year , he remarked : ' Don't be angry ; I will not live ...
Página 39
... seems to have enjoyed employing himself as adviser in a general way , and to have prided himself on being something of a man of the world , especially in his relations with Wharton and Mason , and , later , with younger friends , like ...
... seems to have enjoyed employing himself as adviser in a general way , and to have prided himself on being something of a man of the world , especially in his relations with Wharton and Mason , and , later , with younger friends , like ...
Página 130
... seem at first sight to suggest inexor- ability , which tend in the same direction . During his life in Italy , he often ... seems to have en- couraged a tendency to aloofness . He wrote to his mother , as he was nearing home : ' I don't ...
... seem at first sight to suggest inexor- ability , which tend in the same direction . During his life in Italy , he often ... seems to have en- couraged a tendency to aloofness . He wrote to his mother , as he was nearing home : ' I don't ...
Contenido
ALEXANDER POPE 16881744 | 11 |
THOMAS GRAY 17161771 | 31 |
WILLIAM COWPER 17311800 | 53 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Términos y frases comunes
acquaintance admiration affection Alexander Pope Alfred Tennyson attitude became behaviour Bernard Barton brother Byron Cambridge character Charles Lamb Claire Claire Clairmont Coleridge Coleridge's companion consider considerable correspondence Cowell Cowper criticism dear delight described disposition Dorothy Wordsworth doubtless Edward FitzGerald enjoyed especially evidently expressed Fanny Fanny Brawne feel FitzGerald Frederick Tennyson friends friendship genuine George and Georgiana give Gray Gray's happy Harriet heart humour instance intimate involved Keats Keats's kind Lady later letters literary live London Lytton Strachey marriage married Mary mind Miss Hitchener nature never notable occasion pain PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY perhaps period person pleasure poems poet poetry Pope Pope's regard remarked Samuel Taylor Coleridge seems Shelley Shelley's sister social sometimes soon Southey spirits suffered sympathy tell tenderness Tennyson things Thomas Gray thought tion told Unwin Walpole Wharton wife William woman Wordsworth writing written wrote
Referencias a este libro
The Real Life of Mary Ann Evans: George Eliot, Her Letters and Fiction Rosemarie Bodenheimer Vista previa limitada - 1994 |
Gray Agonistes: Thomas Gray and Masculine Friendship Robert F. Gleckner Sin vista previa disponible - 1997 |