Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 24
Página 20
Thus when Milton writes , Nor love thy life , nor hate ; but , what thou liv ' st , Live
well ; how long or short , permit to heaven , 45 he utters a moral idea . Keats
expresses a more subtle , but equally valid moral idea in his comment upon the ...
Thus when Milton writes , Nor love thy life , nor hate ; but , what thou liv ' st , Live
well ; how long or short , permit to heaven , 45 he utters a moral idea . Keats
expresses a more subtle , but equally valid moral idea in his comment upon the ...
Página 26
To its own impulse every creature stirs : Live by thy light , and Earth will live by
hers . In man himself , Arnold distinguishes two forms of being : his “ animality , ”
which has its counterpart in the natural world , and his higher or spiritual self ...
To its own impulse every creature stirs : Live by thy light , and Earth will live by
hers . In man himself , Arnold distinguishes two forms of being : his “ animality , ”
which has its counterpart in the natural world , and his higher or spiritual self ...
Página 86
4 . looked the more mature attitude toward life and art which he reached before
his death and attempted to express in The Fall of Hyperion which he did not live
to complete . Twentieth - century critics have found in Keats ' s letters a more ...
4 . looked the more mature attitude toward life and art which he reached before
his death and attempted to express in The Fall of Hyperion which he did not live
to complete . Twentieth - century critics have found in Keats ' s letters a more ...
Comentarios de la gente - Escribir un comentario
No encontramos ningún comentario en los lugares habituales.
Contenido
ARNOLD AND EARLY VICTORIAN POETIC THEORY | 9 |
WORDSWORTH | 31 |
BYRON | 58 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 16 secciones no mostradas
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Términos y frases comunes
accept according achievement action admired Ancients appears argument Arnold authority Bacon beauty become believed Byron called century changes chapter character claims classical clear Coleridge common complete course criticism described differences doctrine drama Dryden edition effect effort Elizabethan England English essay example expression fact feeling French genius give human ideas important instance intellectual interest John Keats kind knowledge language later latitude least Letters limited literary literature living logical London Marius matter meaning method mind moral nature neo-classical objective opinion particular passage Pater perhaps philosophy phrase poem poet poetic poetry possible practice present principles probability question reader reason religion religious Restoration revision rules Rymer says seems sense sentence seventeenth Shelley Shelley's spirit standards style suggested theory things third thought true truth universal Victorian vols whole Wordsworth writing