The Consecrated Urn: An Interpretation of Keats in Terms of Growth and FormLongmans, Green, 1959 - 426 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 87
Página 36
... mind : a mind that dealt more easily with thoughts than actions , with concepts than things.3 1 Here and elsewhere I see no point in reproducing Keats's errors of spelling or grammar . 2 A letter of nigh two years later ( 24 September ...
... mind : a mind that dealt more easily with thoughts than actions , with concepts than things.3 1 Here and elsewhere I see no point in reproducing Keats's errors of spelling or grammar . 2 A letter of nigh two years later ( 24 September ...
Página 37
... Mind is stressed ; and mind , we feel too often , dominates in Coleridge the totality which , developed in all its powers , might have borne him above the clouds . The senses are at a discount , un- developed or checked . Mind ...
... Mind is stressed ; and mind , we feel too often , dominates in Coleridge the totality which , developed in all its powers , might have borne him above the clouds . The senses are at a discount , un- developed or checked . Mind ...
Página 225
... mind ' ( such as his own ) and the ' complex mind ' ( such as Coleridge's ) : . . . the simple imaginative Mind may have its rewards in the repe- tition of its own silent Working coming continually on the Spirit with a fine Suddenness ...
... mind ' ( such as his own ) and the ' complex mind ' ( such as Coleridge's ) : . . . the simple imaginative Mind may have its rewards in the repe- tition of its own silent Working coming continually on the Spirit with a fine Suddenness ...
Contenido
Chapter One The Body of Divine Analogy | 2 |
Chapter Two Owls and Eagles | 31 |
Chapter Three The Unwearied Form | 40 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 12 secciones no mostradas
Términos y frases comunes
analogy Apollo Bailey beauty Blake Blake's Byron Cave circle of courses Coleridge Coleridge's D'Arcy Thompson dark Darwin Davies death delight divine earth elements Endymion Erasmus Darwin eternal ethereal Eve of St eyes Fall of Hyperion Fanny Brawne feel flowers forest fruit fruition George and Georgiana golden growth and form happiness heaven human Hyperion Indolence Isabella John Hamilton Reynolds John Keats Keats Keats's Lamia later letter lines living Lycius Manfred Milton mind moon mysteries nature passage passion pattern Peona phrase Plato poem poet Psyche Reynolds rhythm romantic root sense silent Sleep and Poetry song sonnet soul space sphere spirit St Agnes St Mark strophe sweet symbol thee theme things thou thought Timæus Titans tradition trees truth vast idea verse vision voice whole words Wordsworth writing