KeatsFolcroft Library Editions, 1974 - 143 páginas |
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Página 115
... idea of progress , but Keats , like Shelley , obviously was . " The old order changeth , yielding place to new " - such was Keats's underlying thought , with the suggestion that the new order was inevitably better than the old . Yet a ...
... idea of progress , but Keats , like Shelley , obviously was . " The old order changeth , yielding place to new " - such was Keats's underlying thought , with the suggestion that the new order was inevitably better than the old . Yet a ...
Página 117
... Idea with which the mind of Keats was possessed . He is one of the believers in the march of intellect . ' The earliest quotation in the New English Dictionary for that phrase is 1827. Keats , in the wonderful letter of 3 May , 1818 ...
... Idea with which the mind of Keats was possessed . He is one of the believers in the march of intellect . ' The earliest quotation in the New English Dictionary for that phrase is 1827. Keats , in the wonderful letter of 3 May , 1818 ...
Página 120
... idea of progress gains its fullest poetic expression . Nor is the pattern of that idea so far removed , though other values must be added , from the evolutionary conceptions which occupied the nineteenth century . Had Keats lived , he ...
... idea of progress gains its fullest poetic expression . Nor is the pattern of that idea so far removed , though other values must be added , from the evolutionary conceptions which occupied the nineteenth century . Had Keats lived , he ...
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admired Agnes already Apollo attempt beauty Belle Dame Blackwood's Book brothers Charles Brown Charles Cowden Clarke couplets Cowden Clarke creative Dame sans Merci delight describing earlier Endymion Eve of St experience Fall of Hyperion Fanny Brawne friends genius George and Georgiana Hampstead Haydon Hunt's imagination Indian maiden intellect Isabella J. G. LOCKHART John Keats journal letter journey Keats's critics Keats's mind knew Lamia later legend Leigh Hunt lines live London lover Lycius Melancholy ment Milton Monckton months mood narrative nature night Ode to Psyche Odes once passage passion for Fanny pathetic phrase poem poet poetic Psyche published realize Robert Bridges romantic seemed sensation Severn Shakespeare Shelley Sidney Colvin Sir Sidney Sleep and Poetry Spenserian stanza stood tip-toe story suggestion sweet theme thing Thou thought tion Tom's death truth vision volume of 1817 Wentworth Place Wordsworth write wrote