William Collins, Volumen25Twayne Pubishers, 1965 - 192 páginas |
Dentro del libro
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Página 74
... thought so high commendation of Homer , that he found out LIVING WORDS . ... To use Aristotle's expression , Every thing in this poem hath Manners , and all creation is animated . " 14 With these examples before us , we are tempted to ...
... thought so high commendation of Homer , that he found out LIVING WORDS . ... To use Aristotle's expression , Every thing in this poem hath Manners , and all creation is animated . " 14 With these examples before us , we are tempted to ...
Página 81
... thought or image does not support it , differs in nothing from prose . Our poetry , on the contrary , has a language peculiar to itself ; to which almost every one , that has written , has added something by en- riching it with foreign ...
... thought or image does not support it , differs in nothing from prose . Our poetry , on the contrary , has a language peculiar to itself ; to which almost every one , that has written , has added something by en- riching it with foreign ...
Página 106
... thought . ( 31-36 ) This is Simplicity ( or is it Fancy ? ) , and here there is not only the general invocation of Greece , but particularly of the " breathing marble " of Greek sculpture , the vision of which , as I have pointed out ...
... thought . ( 31-36 ) This is Simplicity ( or is it Fancy ? ) , and here there is not only the general invocation of Greece , but particularly of the " breathing marble " of Greek sculpture , the vision of which , as I have pointed out ...
Contenido
Preface | 11 |
The Poetry and the Age | 57 |
The Poems Themselves | 87 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Términos y frases comunes
already appear called Carver century certainly Chichester clear clearly College Collins concerned consider critical death discussed doubt early Eclogues edition eighteenth eighteenth-century English English Studies Essay evidence example expect express fact Fear feel give Gray hand hope idea imagination important influence interest John Johnson Joseph kind language later least less letter Liberty lines lins literary lived London matter mean mentioned MICHIGAN Milton mind nature never occasion Oxford particularly Passions perhaps Persian personification Pindarick poem poet poetic poetry Pope possible probably publication published reader reason reference remarks remember Review scene seems seen sense Simplicity sort sound speak stanza Studies sublime sure taste thing Thomas Thomson thought tion translation true University verse volume Warton whole wild William Collins Winchester writing written wrote young
Referencias a este libro
L'Orient dans la poésie anglaise de l'époque romantique: 1798-1824 Colette Le Yaouanc Vista de fragmentos - 1975 |
The Harp Re-strung: The United Irishmen and the Rise of Irish Literary ... Mary Helen Thuente Vista de fragmentos - 1994 |