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Página 50
Yet “Dance, and Provençal song, and sunburnt mirth” are further to seek. Each
new image joins harmoniously with its predecessor, but if we stop to examine we
observe that this is an imaginative, not a logical unity; to discern the agents of this
...
Yet “Dance, and Provençal song, and sunburnt mirth” are further to seek. Each
new image joins harmoniously with its predecessor, but if we stop to examine we
observe that this is an imaginative, not a logical unity; to discern the agents of this
...
Página 106
It is a necessary gesture because the poet in his numbness can scarcely respond
to the song, and also because without a further drugging the song is not an
unmingled pleasure. . . . . . . Thus wine was at one time or another explicitly linked
...
It is a necessary gesture because the poet in his numbness can scarcely respond
to the song, and also because without a further drugging the song is not an
unmingled pleasure. . . . . . . Thus wine was at one time or another explicitly linked
...
Página 110
... for claiming that , like the urn , it has remained " in midst of other woe / Than
ours , a friend to man . ” It has been heard by all men— " emperor and clown ” ( or
rustic ) —and “ perhaps ” its song " found a path / Through the sad heart of Ruth ...
... for claiming that , like the urn , it has remained " in midst of other woe / Than
ours , a friend to man . ” It has been heard by all men— " emperor and clown ” ( or
rustic ) —and “ perhaps ” its song " found a path / Through the sad heart of Ruth ...
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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 | |
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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