Shelley and His Readers: Beyond Paranoid PoliticsUniversity of Missouri Press, 1999 - 278 páginas |
Contenido
1 | |
13 | |
Contagion and Personification in Queen | 58 |
Reforming the Reviewers | 109 |
The Elegiac Reception of Adonais | 151 |
Notes | 197 |
Works Cited | 259 |
273 | |
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Términos y frases comunes
Adonais aesthetic appreciation agency allegory argues Asia's attacks on Shelley audience beautiful idealisms Blackwood's Blackwood's Magazine calls chapter claims Cobbett Coleridge consolation conspiracy contagion contagious critics Edinburgh Review effect elegiac elegy essay fame Francis Jeffrey genre Godwin Hazlitt human Hunt's imagination implies individual insists John Gibson Lockhart Keats Keats's language Leigh Hunt letter Literary Gazette Lockhart London Magazine Lycidas Mary Shelley mind moral notion Ollier paranoid rhetoric paranoid style passage Percy Bysshe Shelley personal attacks personifications poem poem's poet poet’s poetic poison preface Prometheus Unbound published Quarterly Review Quarterly's Queen Mab quoted radical readers reading reception refers reformers reformist review of Prometheus reviewer's Revolt of Islam revolution Robert Southey Romantic RR,C Satanic scenario self-portrait semichorus sense Shelley circle Shelley's death Shelley's friends Shelley's poetry Southey Southey’s spirit stance stanza subversion suggests takes Tory transcendent University Press William writers
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Página 12 - The great secret of morals is love; or a going out of our own nature, and an identification of ourselves with the beautiful which exists in thought, action, or person, not our own. A man, to be greatly good, must imagine intensely and comprehensively; he must put himself in the place of another and of many others; the pains and pleasures of his species must become his own.