Inspiration in Milton and KeatsMacmillan, 1982 - 212 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 42
Página 141
... death : and ' who could in such a case bear with death ' . Death in some form or another has to be borne time and again throughout life , in the ' buffets of the world ' ( as Keats put it earlier ) , therefore these ' pains and troubles ...
... death : and ' who could in such a case bear with death ' . Death in some form or another has to be borne time and again throughout life , in the ' buffets of the world ' ( as Keats put it earlier ) , therefore these ' pains and troubles ...
Página 148
... Death ' ; and asks , implicitly , whether his death now through ' musèd rhyme ' would not be an appropriate response to the Nightingale's ' full - throated ease ' : whether ' take into the air my quiet breath ' would ( through a ...
... Death ' ; and asks , implicitly , whether his death now through ' musèd rhyme ' would not be an appropriate response to the Nightingale's ' full - throated ease ' : whether ' take into the air my quiet breath ' would ( through a ...
Página 163
... death . He imprisons himself in the ' little coffin ' of a room at Shanklin , with ' irretriev- able ' sickness at his elbow in the form of Rice , looking out on the ' stage of the world ' through ' two little loopholes ' ; and directs ...
... death . He imprisons himself in the ' little coffin ' of a room at Shanklin , with ' irretriev- able ' sickness at his elbow in the form of Rice , looking out on the ' stage of the world ' through ' two little loopholes ' ; and directs ...
Contenido
Miltons Newenlightened World | 22 |
Milton and the Genius of the Shore | 40 |
Miltons Search for the Idea of the Beautiful | 76 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Términos y frases comunes
action active appears approach beauty becomes begins close context continues darkness death describes desire direct dream early echoes emotional epic existence experience expressed external eyes fact fades Fall false figure finally finds forced function give heart heaven human Hyperion idea imagination immortal inspiration invocation Keats Keats's kind Knight knowledge language learning leaves letter light lines live look Lycidas meaning mental metaphor Milton mind mortal Muse Nativity nature never Nightingale once opening original pain Paradise Lost passion pastoral picture poem poet poet's poetic poetry present question reality relation represents rhetorical Samson seems sense sensuous shows sing song soul sound spirit stanza story suggests takes thee things thou thought true truth turns understanding verse vision voice whole wild writing written
Referencias a este libro
The Good Society and the Inner World: Psychoanalysis, Politics, and Culture Michael Rustin Vista de fragmentos - 1991 |