English Critical Essays: Nineteenth CenturyEdmund David Jones Oxford University Press, 1921 - 610 páginas |
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Página 128
... truth ; but as their periods are harmonious and rhythmical , and contain in themselves the elements of verse ; being the echo of the eternal music . Nor are those supreme poets , who have employed traditional forms of rhythm on account ...
... truth ; but as their periods are harmonious and rhythmical , and contain in themselves the elements of verse ; being the echo of the eternal music . Nor are those supreme poets , who have employed traditional forms of rhythm on account ...
Página 351
... truth of another sort , equally characteristic of the writer , equally drawn from nature and substituting a healthy sense of enjoy- ment for intenser emotion . Exclusiveness of liking for this or that mode of truth , only shows , either ...
... truth of another sort , equally characteristic of the writer , equally drawn from nature and substituting a healthy sense of enjoy- ment for intenser emotion . Exclusiveness of liking for this or that mode of truth , only shows , either ...
Página 404
... truth which may fill a place in a scientific treatise , may also furnish an occasion for the generation of poetry , which we thereupon choose to call descriptive or didactic . The poetry is not in the object itself , nor in the ...
... truth which may fill a place in a scientific treatise , may also furnish an occasion for the generation of poetry , which we thereupon choose to call descriptive or didactic . The poetry is not in the object itself , nor in the ...
Contenido
WILLIAM WORDSWORTH 17701850 | 1 |
SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE 17721834 | 40 |
WILLIAM BLAKE 17571827 | 85 |
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Términos y frases comunes
action admiration Aeschylus artist beauty Ben Jonson called character charm Chaucer Coleridge Coleridge's colour composition criticism Dante delight distinction divine drama effect emotion excellence excitement expression fact faculty Faerie Queene fancy feeling genius give Goethe Grasmere Greek Hamlet heart highest human idea images imagination impression instance intellectual judgement kind language less literature living look Lyrical Ballads Macbeth manner means metre metrical Milton mind modern moral nature Nether Stowey never object Orlando Furioso Othello painting Paradise Lost passion pathetic fallacy peculiar perfect perhaps person Petrarch philosopher pleasure poem poet poet's poetical poetry present Priam principle produced prose reader reason rhyme sacred sacred poet seems sense Shakespeare sort soul speak Spenser spirit stanza style sympathy taste things thought tion tragedy true truth uncon verse whole William Wordsworth words Wordsworth write