Lectures and Addresses on Literary and Social Topics, 2 tomas |
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The Christian of the middle ages tortured his Jew brother just because he did not recognize the same identity of sentiment and moral nature , which the great poet of our country has put so passionately and so touchingly into the lips of ...
The Christian of the middle ages tortured his Jew brother just because he did not recognize the same identity of sentiment and moral nature , which the great poet of our country has put so passionately and so touchingly into the lips of ...
22 psl.
Then let the poet come with that eye of his " glancing from heaven to earth , from earth to heaven , " and his imagination creates another class of truths ; the suggested meaning of it to him is the triumph of mind over matter ...
Then let the poet come with that eye of his " glancing from heaven to earth , from earth to heaven , " and his imagination creates another class of truths ; the suggested meaning of it to him is the triumph of mind over matter ...
23 psl.
The poet teaches him by suggestive inspiration the hidden meaning of common things , transfiguring life , as it were , by shedding a glory on it ; and if you will force the poor man to see nothing but the wretched reality that is around ...
The poet teaches him by suggestive inspiration the hidden meaning of common things , transfiguring life , as it were , by shedding a glory on it ; and if you will force the poor man to see nothing but the wretched reality that is around ...
98 psl.
... description of that which one of the poets of that age thought to be the legitimate call and mission of the poet . Thus writes Pope :" Poetry and criticism are by no means the universal concern 98 LECTURES AND ADDRESSES.
... description of that which one of the poets of that age thought to be the legitimate call and mission of the poet . Thus writes Pope :" Poetry and criticism are by no means the universal concern 98 LECTURES AND ADDRESSES.
99 psl.
You will scarcely wonder that when a poet could thus write of his art , working men and real men , who have no time for prettinesses , and have not the privilege of being " admitted into the best company , " should be indifferent to ...
You will scarcely wonder that when a poet could thus write of his art , working men and real men , who have no time for prettinesses , and have not the privilege of being " admitted into the best company , " should be indifferent to ...
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Lectures and Addresses on Literary and Social Topics Frederick William Robertson Visos knygos peržiūra - 1859 |
Lectures and Addresses on Literary and Social Topics Frederick William Robertson Visos knygos peržiūra - 1858 |
Lectures and Addresses on Literary and Social Topics, 2 tomas Frederick William Robertson Visos knygos peržiūra - 1859 |
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