Shelley's Later Poetry: A Study of His Prophetic ImaginationColumbia University Press, 1961 - 332 páginas Using Prometheus Unbound as its organizing center, this book describes the materials and traces the unfinished argument of Shelley's poetry in his Italian period. |
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Página 5
... begins in earnest , but begin he certainly does . Even in an Invocation to Misery he is willing to suggest with as much seriousness as mockery : ' Tis an evil lot and yet Let us make the best of it ; If love can live when pleasure dies ...
... begins in earnest , but begin he certainly does . Even in an Invocation to Misery he is willing to suggest with as much seriousness as mockery : ' Tis an evil lot and yet Let us make the best of it ; If love can live when pleasure dies ...
Página 57
... begins , and that all the opening speech gives us is just an echo of it after a brief lapse . I find this unlikely . The moment of regeneration has , of course , been imminent for some time . Misery has made Prome- theus wise and has ...
... begins , and that all the opening speech gives us is just an echo of it after a brief lapse . I find this unlikely . The moment of regeneration has , of course , been imminent for some time . Misery has made Prome- theus wise and has ...
Página 257
... begin , Shelley forgets his oversimplification of the legend and discovers that he can make use of other , earlier aspects of it . Indeed , he begins to discover this when writing the recalled curse : Thou art omnipotent . O'er all ...
... begin , Shelley forgets his oversimplification of the legend and discovers that he can make use of other , earlier aspects of it . Indeed , he begins to discover this when writing the recalled curse : Thou art omnipotent . O'er all ...
Contenido
PROLOGUE I | 1 |
Lyrical Drama | 40 |
The Regeneration of Prometheus | 53 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Términos y frases comunes
Act Four Adonais Alastor anapestic Apollo Asia Asia's Beatrice beauty bright cave Cenci Chaos chariot Christian clouds critic curse Dante dark death decay deep Demogorgon depicts describes divine drama dream Earth earthly Emily Epipsychidion eternal Euganean Hills evil figure flowers Furies goal Greek hate Heaven Hellas human imagery imagination immortality Italian Jupiter Keats light lines living lyric Mary Shelley millennium Milton mind mirror moon moral mountains mutability nature Orsino Panthea Paradise passage passion pavilion Percy Bysshe Shelley perhaps play poem poet poetic Preface Promethean Prometheus Unbound prose Queen Mab R. S. Thomas radical regeneration revenge Revolt of Islam ruin scene seems self-contempt self-love shadow Shelley Shelley's Platonic simply slaves sleep song soul spirit stanza suggests sweet T. S. Eliot temptation thee things thou thought throne tion Tmolus tower veil verse vision voice wind words