Coleridge, Keats, and the Imagination: Romanticism and Adam's Dream : Essays in Honor of Walter Jackson Bate

Priekinis viršelis
J. Robert Barth, John L. Mahoney
University of Missouri Press, 1990 - 225 psl.
In November 1817, John Keats wrote to Benjamin Bailey, The imagination may be compared to Adam's dream - he awoke and found it truth. The Romantic poet's concept of the imagination was central to their poetry, becoming a persistent and powerful theme central to many works. In nine new essays by scholars commissioned in honour of Walter Jackson Bate, this collection examines the uses of the imagination in the poetry of Keats and Coleridge, and by extension in all Romantic literature.

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A Profile I
7
Thomas McFarland Involute and Symbol in
29
J Robert Barth S J Coleridges Scriptural Imagination
135
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