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Página 24
... Reynolds , he says : " O fret not after knowledge . . . " ; he has none , and can sing as well without it . Two days later ( p . 107 ) he is reading Voltaire and Gibbon , although he " wrote to Reynolds the other day to prove reading of ...
... Reynolds , he says : " O fret not after knowledge . . . " ; he has none , and can sing as well without it . Two days later ( p . 107 ) he is reading Voltaire and Gibbon , although he " wrote to Reynolds the other day to prove reading of ...
Página 59
... Reynolds , he becomes " sensible all this is a mere sophistication , however it may neighbour to any truths , to excuse my own indolence . " There is not much chance of rivaling Jove anyway , and one can consider oneself " very well off ...
... Reynolds , he becomes " sensible all this is a mere sophistication , however it may neighbour to any truths , to excuse my own indolence . " There is not much chance of rivaling Jove anyway , and one can consider oneself " very well off ...
Página 90
... Reynolds , " is indeed less than a present palpable reality . " It would be a distortion of fact to maintain that he always held this later view , but it is worth noting that even when he and his fancy could not agree , he declared ...
... Reynolds , " is indeed less than a present palpable reality . " It would be a distortion of fact to maintain that he always held this later view , but it is worth noting that even when he and his fancy could not agree , he declared ...
Contenido
INTRODUCTIONWalter Jackson Bate | 1 |
SCEPTICISM IN | 71 |
THE ODE TO PSYCHE AND THE ODE ON MELANCHOLY | 91 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Términos y frases comunes
Agnes Apollo Apollonius autumn beauty is truth become Belle Dame critics death described drama dream dreamer earthly empathic Endymion essence eternal Eve of St experience eyes fade faery lands 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 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 narrative nature Negative Capability nightingale Ode on Melancholy Ode to Psyche oxymoronic pain paradise passage pleasure poem poet poet's poetic 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