Inspiration in Milton and KeatsMacmillan, 1982 - 212 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 23
Página 84
... invocations , the reader may become aware that he is following the experience of a poet who approaches his subject with what Keats would call Negative Capability . The invocation for Book I ( and the whole poem ) delineates the scope of ...
... invocations , the reader may become aware that he is following the experience of a poet who approaches his subject with what Keats would call Negative Capability . The invocation for Book I ( and the whole poem ) delineates the scope of ...
Página 86
... invocation , the image of the poet and his inner state has become inseparable from the ' argument ' itself ; in the last two lines , ' I ' , ' God ' and ' men ' are linked in a firm relation- ship , and the foundation - stone for the ...
... invocation , the image of the poet and his inner state has become inseparable from the ' argument ' itself ; in the last two lines , ' I ' , ' God ' and ' men ' are linked in a firm relation- ship , and the foundation - stone for the ...
Página 97
... invocation to a heavenly Muse . Bereft of mortal sight , Samson is forced to concentrate on things invisible . The language of the poem is very different from Paradise Regained's educated or meditative voice ; it contains imagery so ...
... invocation to a heavenly Muse . Bereft of mortal sight , Samson is forced to concentrate on things invisible . The language of the poem is very different from Paradise Regained's educated or meditative voice ; it contains imagery so ...
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 | |
Otras 2 secciones no mostradas
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Términos y frases comunes
action artistic Autumn beauty becomes begins Belle Dame blind Cave Christ Comus context creative Dante darkness death describes divine dramatic dream earthly echoes emotional endeavour Endymion epic existence experience of inspiration expressed external eyes fades Fall of Hyperion false Fanny Brawne Fingal's Cave heart heaven idea image of inspiration imagery imagination immortal inner invocation John Keats journey Keats Keats's Knight knowledge L'Allegro Lamia landscape language letter light lines Lycidas Lycidas's Lycius meaning melodious mental metaphor Milton mind Moneta mortal Muse Nativity Ode nature never Nightingale Oceanus Ode to Psyche pain Paradise Lost Paradise Regained passion pastoral picture Plato poem poet poet's poetic poetic principle Psyche reality rhetorical rhyme Samson Samson Agonistes Saturn sense sensuous shadow sing song sonnet soul spirit stanza suggests symbolised takes tears thee thou thought true truth vale verse vision voice wild words writing
Referencias a este libro
The Good Society and the Inner World: Psychoanalysis, Politics, and Culture Michael Rustin Vista de fragmentos - 1991 |