Keats1964 |
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Página 13
... suffering ? If his existence is justified , can he allow his imagination to be self - centered , in the large sense " lyrical , " or should it be dramatic and rooted in the heart " Keats . " From Mythology and the Romantic Tradition ...
... suffering ? If his existence is justified , can he allow his imagination to be self - centered , in the large sense " lyrical , " or should it be dramatic and rooted in the heart " Keats . " From Mythology and the Romantic Tradition ...
Página 165
... suffering , is wonderful to contem- plate ; and not least wonderful is his failure in what was to be his greatest and most ambitious work . He set himself high standards , in a plenitude of critical power ; and he knew what was failure ...
... suffering , is wonderful to contem- plate ; and not least wonderful is his failure in what was to be his greatest and most ambitious work . He set himself high standards , in a plenitude of critical power ; and he knew what was failure ...
Página 168
... suffering , giving comfort and light to per- plexed humanity . We can hardly read the lines which portray the coun ... suffer- ing of the world — it must always remain mysterious to us ; it has never said that it may be justified by an ...
... suffering , giving comfort and light to per- plexed humanity . We can hardly read the lines which portray the coun ... suffer- ing of the world — it must always remain mysterious to us ; it has never said that it may be justified by an ...
Contenido
INTRODUCTIONWalter Jackson Bate | 1 |
Discussions of Particular Poems | 17 |
11 | 26 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Términos y frases comunes
Agnes Apollo Apollonius autumn beauty is truth become Belle Dame century critics death described drama dream dreamer earthly edited empathic Endymion essence eternal Eve of St experience eyes fade Fall of Hyperion fancy Fanny Brawne feel frieze fusion goddess Grecian Urn H. W. Garrod happy Harvard Hazlitt's heart heaven's bourne human passion ideal identity imagery images imagination immortal intense John Keats Keats wrote Keats's Lamia letter lines lovers Lycius Madeline Madeline's maiden Melancholy Milton mind Mnemosyne mortal movement myth nature Negative Capability nightingale Ode on Melancholy Ode to Psyche oxymoronic pain paradise passage pleasure poem poet poet's poetic poetry Porphyro reality romantic says second version sensation sense sensuous Shakespeare Shelley soft song sonnet soul spiritual stanza four stanza three suggests sweet symbols synaesthetic T. S. Eliot temporal theme thing third stanza thou thought three stanzas tion vision visionary Walter Jackson Bate word Wordsworth writing