The New Moulton's Library of Literary Criticism: Mid-VictorianChelsea House Publishers, 1985 |
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Página 4277
... hand in hand . Silence and horror are their cult , and there is not one of the ladies whose ever - approaching death would not be hastened by a breath of reality . Ligeia dwells in “ a dim and decaying city by the Rhine , " but who ...
... hand in hand . Silence and horror are their cult , and there is not one of the ladies whose ever - approaching death would not be hastened by a breath of reality . Ligeia dwells in “ a dim and decaying city by the Rhine , " but who ...
Página 4543
... hand , there are many passages , such as " Rip Van Winkle , " which could hardly have appeared in Goldsmith's England . Though Goldsmith's England , of course , was becoming sentimental , it never got to that delight in a romantic past ...
... hand , there are many passages , such as " Rip Van Winkle , " which could hardly have appeared in Goldsmith's England . Though Goldsmith's England , of course , was becoming sentimental , it never got to that delight in a romantic past ...
Página 4803
... hand may shove by justice " meets with no approval from her ; nor , on the other hand , are the poor allowed to suppose that their poverty or wrongs are to absolve them from the exhibition of those virtues which should be common to ...
... hand may shove by justice " meets with no approval from her ; nor , on the other hand , are the poor allowed to suppose that their poverty or wrongs are to absolve them from the exhibition of those virtues which should be common to ...
Contenido
5932646 | 4245 |
Anne Brontë | 4283 |
William Lisle Bowles | 4290 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 35 secciones no mostradas
Términos y frases comunes
admiration American Anne Brontë appeared artist beauty Byron character Charlotte Brontë charm Coleridge Cooper criticism death Deerslayer delight Douglas Jerrold Edgar Allan Poe Edgar Poe Edinburgh Edinburgh Review effect Emily Brontë English essays expression eyes fact fancy faults feeling fiction Frankenstein friends genius grace heart human humour imagination impression intellectual interest Irving Jane Eyre Jeffrey Joanna Baillie Lady Lady Morgan language Leigh Hunt less Letter literary literature living Lord Lord Byron Macaulay manner Mary Shelley merit mind Miss Moore moral nature never novel passages passion peculiar perhaps person philosophical pleasure Poe's poems poet poetical poetry prose Quincey Quincey's reader Review romance Scott seems sense sentiment Shelley soul spirit story style sympathy taste things thought tion true truth verse volume Washington Irving whole Wilson woman words Wordsworth writings written wrote