Shelley: Poetry & Prose: With Essays by Browning, Bagehot, Swinburne, and Reminiscences by OthersClarendon Press, 1931 - 199 páginas |
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Página 6
... less costly , more serviceable remedy for his own ill than he has proposed for the general one ; nor does he ever contemplate an object on his own account from a less elevation than he uses in exhibiting it to the world . How shall we ...
... less costly , more serviceable remedy for his own ill than he has proposed for the general one ; nor does he ever contemplate an object on his own account from a less elevation than he uses in exhibiting it to the world . How shall we ...
Página 163
... less than that of the divinest . The verge of a glacier , like that of Bossons , presents the most vivid image of desolation that it is possible to conceive . 10 No one dares to approach it ; for the enormous pinnacles of ice which ...
... less than that of the divinest . The verge of a glacier , like that of Bossons , presents the most vivid image of desolation that it is possible to conceive . 10 No one dares to approach it ; for the enormous pinnacles of ice which ...
Página 174
... less ( to use a Platonic sophism , ) supposes the sense of a just claim to the greater , and that we admirers of Faust are on the right road to Paradise . Such a supposition is not more absurd , and is certainly less de- moniacal , than ...
... less ( to use a Platonic sophism , ) supposes the sense of a just claim to the greater , and that we admirers of Faust are on the right road to Paradise . Such a supposition is not more absurd , and is certainly less de- moniacal , than ...
Contenido
SELECTIONS contd | 11 |
Verses by Robert Browning | 12 |
Swinburne on Text of Shelley | 20 |
Otras 12 secciones no mostradas
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Términos y frases comunes
Adonais aëreal Aeschylus Alastor autumn beautiful breath bright burning Byron clouds cold Dæmons dark dead death deep Defence of Poetry delight Demogorgon divine doth drama dream earth eternal Euganean Hills eyes faculty fire flowers gentle Gisborne gleam glory golden grief harmony heart Heaven hills hope human imagination impulse isle Keats leaves Leigh Hunt light lips living Lord Byron Maddalo melody mighty mind moon moral morning mountains mourning mourns for Adonais nature never night nursling o'er Ocean odour Ozymandias pain pale Paradise passion Peacock PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY perfect pine Pisa poem poet poetry Prometheus Unbound round Serchio Shelley Shelley's sleep smile song sorrow soul spirit splendour stars stream sweet tears thee thine things THOMAS LOVE PEACOCK thou art thought throne tower truth veil verse wandering waves weep wild wind wings words writings ΙΟ