Samuel Taylor ColeridgeFaber & Faber, 2011-09-01 - 77 psl. In this series, a contemporary poet selects and introduces a poet of the past. By their choice of poems and by the personal and critical reactions they express in their prefaces, the editors offer insights into their own work as well as providing an accessible and passionate introduction to the most important poets in our literature. |
Knygos viduje
Rezultatai 1–3 iš 3
psl.
... items presented should be fragments and drafts rather than finished poems, and that there is such duplication as well: two versions of 'Kubla Khan' and both the verse letter to Sara Hutchinson and the 'Dejection' ode, which Coleridge ...
... items presented should be fragments and drafts rather than finished poems, and that there is such duplication as well: two versions of 'Kubla Khan' and both the verse letter to Sara Hutchinson and the 'Dejection' ode, which Coleridge ...
psl.
... Item 1. Called by Mays 'Lines Written in a Dream', it evokes what is now called clinical depression. A characteristic Coleridge theme, in a nutshell. Item 2. A cushat or cushit: a pigeon or ring-dove in North Country and Borders dialect ...
... Item 1. Called by Mays 'Lines Written in a Dream', it evokes what is now called clinical depression. A characteristic Coleridge theme, in a nutshell. Item 2. A cushat or cushit: a pigeon or ring-dove in North Country and Borders dialect ...
psl.
... Item 7. Another ' dramatic ' line , but why ? Because we do not think of Coleridge as vengeful and glorying in it ? But here he is meditating on how to describe a spectacular revenge . Item 8. Given the title ' Bo - Peep and I Spy ...
... Item 7. Another ' dramatic ' line , but why ? Because we do not think of Coleridge as vengeful and glorying in it ? But here he is meditating on how to describe a spectacular revenge . Item 8. Given the title ' Bo - Peep and I Spy ...
Turinys
6 I have experiencd The worst the World can wreak on | 6 |
7 A sumptuous and magnificent revenge | 7 |
8 In the corner one | 8 |
9 Tho hid in spiral myrtle Wreath | 9 |
10 A low dead Thunder muttered thro the Night Nature sweet Nurse O take me in thy lap The Day of our dire Fate as yet but dawns | 10 |
11 Water and Windmills Greenness Islets Green | 11 |
12 I stand alone nor tho my Heart should break | 12 |
13 Truth I pursued as Fancy sketchd the way | 13 |
18 Oer hung with Yew midway the Muses Mount | 18 |
19 Kubla Khan Coleridges fair copy | 19 |
20 Kubla Khan or a Vision in a Dream | 21 |
21 The Pains of Sleep | 23 |
22 Christabel | 23 |
23 Frost at Midnight | 23 |
24 This Limetree Bower my Prison | 23 |
25 The Mad Monk | 25 |
14 O mercy O me miserable man | 14 |
15 Seaward whitegleaming thro the busy Scud | 15 |
16 Twas not a mist nor was it quite a cloud So thin a cloud And Hesper now one blackblue Cloud | 16 |
17 Over the broad tho shallow rapid Stream | 17 |
26 A Letter to Well if the Bard was weatherwise | 27 |
An Ode 28 The Ancyent Marinere 1798 | 41 |
Kiti leidimai - Peržiūrėti viską
Pagrindiniai terminai ir frazės
Albatross Ancient Mariner ancyent Marinere Bard Baron beautiful beneath blue Bracy Breast breeze bright Child Cloud Coleridge Coleridge’s cross'd dear deep Demon Copperhead Derek Mahon Dorothy Wordsworth doth Douglas Dunn dreams eyes fair fear feel fragment Friend gazing gentle Geraldine green Grief groan hath heard Heart Heaven Hermit Item James Fenton Kubla Khan Lady's light live Look look'd loud Maid Michael Hofmann mist Moon Mountains mov'd Music night o'er pages Buy Pain pass'd Patrick Spence Poems selected poet poetry Porlock pray pray'd Quoth Roland de Vaux round sacred River sails SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE Seamus Heaney seem'd selected by Ted shadow Ship silent Sir Leoline Sleep Soul sounds spake spirit Star stood strange T. S. ELIOT tale Ted Hughes thee thine things thou thought thro Tree turn’d Vision voice wedding-guest William and Dorothy William Wordsworth wind Wordsworth