Shelley: A Collection of Critical Essays, Volumen49George M. Ridenour Prentice-Hall, 1965 - 182 páginas Commentaries on Shelley's sensitive nature poetry and its place in 19th-century Romanticism. |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 20
Página 70
... describe it as now dark , now glittering is to understand it only partially by adopting the con- ventions built into the normal form of the English language . Nor , contrarily , is it a figment of the mind , since there obviously is an ...
... describe it as now dark , now glittering is to understand it only partially by adopting the con- ventions built into the normal form of the English language . Nor , contrarily , is it a figment of the mind , since there obviously is an ...
Página 83
... describe the universe as " everlasting " would be inadequate , since this would imply its autonomy ; to describe it only as flowing would be partial , since this would imply it is wholly mental . The reality of the world of the ...
... describe the universe as " everlasting " would be inadequate , since this would imply its autonomy ; to describe it only as flowing would be partial , since this would imply it is wholly mental . The reality of the world of the ...
Página 97
... describe as kindling the universe . The gleams of the remoter world are , of course , symbolically imaged by the snow at the summit of the mountain , and the poet prepares for this conjunction by describing Mont Blanc as “ still , snowy ...
... describe as kindling the universe . The gleams of the remoter world are , of course , symbolically imaged by the snow at the summit of the mountain , and the poet prepares for this conjunction by describing Mont Blanc as “ still , snowy ...
Contenido
Shelleys Optimism by George M Ridenour | 1 |
The Abstractness of Shelley by Richard Harter Fogle | 13 |
Shelley and the Creative Principle by Leone Vivante | 31 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 9 secciones no mostradas
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Términos y frases comunes
Adonais Alastor anapestic Apollo Arve Asia beautiful C. S. Lewis called cave caverns chariot clouds creative darkness death Demogorgon divine dramatic dream earth edited eruption Essay essence eternity evil existence experience expressed external world fire flow glaciers gleam heart Heaven human mind human thought Hymn of Pan Ibid ideal imagery imagination Intellectual Philosophy Jupiter Keats Keats's light lines Mary Godwin meaning merely metaphor Mont Blanc mountain mutability nature necessitarian objective ontology Panthea paradox paragraph perception Percy Bysshe Shelley pines poem poet poet's poetic Power preface Prometheus Unbound Queen Mab Ravine reality Revolt of Islam river Romantic Rousseau scene seems sense shadows Shape Shelley wrote Shelley's poetry Shelleyan simile sleep solitude song soul spirit spirit of solitude stanza stream symbolic thou thought-thing Tmolus trance transcendent truth universe of things unknowable veil Vesuvius vision volcanic West Wind Wilson Knight Witch of Atlas words