A History of English Poetry, Volumen6Russell & Russell, 1962 |
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Página 9
... letters in a spirit of exaggerated humility . This respect was largely , and even justly , due to the perfection which the French language had acquired from the refine- ments given to it by the illustrious writers of the seven- teenth ...
... letters in a spirit of exaggerated humility . This respect was largely , and even justly , due to the perfection which the French language had acquired from the refine- ments given to it by the illustrious writers of the seven- teenth ...
Página 231
... letters to Thomas Allsop : Poets ( especially if philosophers too ) are apt to represent the effect made upon themselves as general ; the geese of Phoebus are all swans ; and Wordsworth's shepherds and estates men are Wordsworths , even ...
... letters to Thomas Allsop : Poets ( especially if philosophers too ) are apt to represent the effect made upon themselves as general ; the geese of Phoebus are all swans ; and Wordsworth's shepherds and estates men are Wordsworths , even ...
Página 240
... letters to him have not been published , his to her are of the greatest interest , as suggesting an incompatibility of temperament which made inevitable the subsequent separation . Byron evidently admired his correspondent's intellect ...
... letters to him have not been published , his to her are of the greatest interest , as suggesting an incompatibility of temperament which made inevitable the subsequent separation . Byron evidently admired his correspondent's intellect ...
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Términos y frases comunes
action admiration ancient artistic Ballads Baviad beautiful Biographia Literaria Byron Canto character classical Coleridge Coleridge's composition Crabbe criticism diction dramatic Edinburgh Review eighteenth century England English Poetry epic expression fancy feeling feudal French Revolution genius German Giaour Godwin Greek heart Hogg Holy Roman Empire Horace Walpole Ibid ideal ideas imagination imitation influence inspired Jacobite John Hookham Frere Keats language Leigh Hunt letters liberty lines literary literature Lord lyrical Lyrical Ballads manner Mary Godwin metre metrical mind Minstrel moral movement narrative Nature Nether Stowey never o'er opinion passion philosophical poem poet poet's poetical political Pope principles published reader reflected Renaissance revival Revolt of Islam revolutionary romantic satire says Scott Scottish seems sentiment Shelley Shelley's showed social society song sonnet Southey spirit stanza style sympathy taste tendency thee thou thought tion verse Whig William Wordsworth writes