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Página 16
Yet the identifying of nature and myth had been, so to speak, incidental in
Wordsworth. He was glad to find in the origins of myth a traditional and religious
sanction for his own natural religion, but the element of pure myth was far less
important ...
Yet the identifying of nature and myth had been, so to speak, incidental in
Wordsworth. He was glad to find in the origins of myth a traditional and religious
sanction for his own natural religion, but the element of pure myth was far less
important ...
Página 97
But the orders of reality contend here; the natural gardener breeds only in finite
variety, but the abundance of the ... The poem Ode to Psyche is unique, and also
central, for its art is a natural growth out of nature, based as it is upon a very ...
But the orders of reality contend here; the natural gardener breeds only in finite
variety, but the abundance of the ... The poem Ode to Psyche is unique, and also
central, for its art is a natural growth out of nature, based as it is upon a very ...
Página 125
He must assimilate its nature in proportion as he enters more deeply into this
region and consequently as its nature becomes more intimately a part of him.
Therefore in the third stanza the statements of the nature of heaven's bourne slip
from ...
He must assimilate its nature in proportion as he enters more deeply into this
region and consequently as its nature becomes more intimately a part of him.
Therefore in the third stanza the statements of the nature of heaven's bourne slip
from ...
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Contenido
INTRODUCTIONWalter Jackson Bate | 1 |
SCEPTICISM IN | 71 |
THE ODE TO PSYCHE AND THE ODE ON MELANCHOLY | 91 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 6 secciones no mostradas
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Términos y frases comunes
Agnes appear beauty become begins called century close comes completely course critics death described drama dream edited Endymion English Eros and Psyche essence existence experience expression eyes fact Fall feel figures final followed happy heart heaven's bourne human Hyperion idea ideal identity images imagination immortal intense interest John Keats Keats's Lamia later least leave less letter light lines lives lovers Lycius Madeline meaning merely Milton mind Mnemosyne mortal movement moves nature never nightingale object pain passage passion perhaps pleasure poem poet poet's poetic poetry Porphyro present Press Psyche reality romantic says seems sense song soul speak spiritual stanza suggests sweet symbols thing third thou thought tion touch truth turn University vision Wordsworth writing written wrote