KeatsFolcroft Library Editions, 1974 - 143 páginas |
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Página 20
... Thou wilt think that some amorous Zephyr is nigh : Yet no- as I breathe I will press thy fair knee , And then thou wilt know that the sigh comes from me . Also he seizes the form of epistolary couplets , the style of poetic dishabille ...
... Thou wilt think that some amorous Zephyr is nigh : Yet no- as I breathe I will press thy fair knee , And then thou wilt know that the sigh comes from me . Also he seizes the form of epistolary couplets , the style of poetic dishabille ...
Página 94
... thou sing , and I have ears in vain - To thy high requiem become a sod . In poetry alone is there the possibility of main- taining beauty lost as a physical experience by the recreating power of the imagination thus the nightingale's ...
... thou sing , and I have ears in vain - To thy high requiem become a sod . In poetry alone is there the possibility of main- taining beauty lost as a physical experience by the recreating power of the imagination thus the nightingale's ...
Página 119
... thou rotted'st half . Keats , it is true , had never expressed in verse form this aspect of his belief of what the function of poetry should be , though there are suggestions of it in I stood tip - toe , but in his letters the whole ...
... thou rotted'st half . Keats , it is true , had never expressed in verse form this aspect of his belief of what the function of poetry should be , though there are suggestions of it in I stood tip - toe , but in his letters the whole ...
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Términos y frases comunes
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