Lyrical BalladsRoutledge, 2013-05-13 - 440 psl. When it was first published, Lyrical Ballads enraged the critics of the day: Wordsworth and Coleridge had given poetry a voice, one decidedly different to that which had been voiced before. This acclaimed Routledge Classics edition offers the reader the opportunity to study the poems in their original contexts as they appeared to Coleridges and Wordsworths contemporaries, and includes some of their most famous poems, including Coleridges Rime of the Ancyent Marinere. |
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xxii psl.
... produce a variorum edition of the poems; the history of indi- vidual poems is well enough documented in the collected works of Wordsworth and Coleridge. Our main concern has been to make the poems readily available as a unique body of ...
... produce a variorum edition of the poems; the history of indi- vidual poems is well enough documented in the collected works of Wordsworth and Coleridge. Our main concern has been to make the poems readily available as a unique body of ...
7 psl.
... produce from his own plot of land enough to support his wife and fam- ily . His political views , in fact , were much closer to those of the Diggers of the seventeenth century than to those of the French Terror . He had left Clevedon ...
... produce from his own plot of land enough to support his wife and fam- ily . His political views , in fact , were much closer to those of the Diggers of the seventeenth century than to those of the French Terror . He had left Clevedon ...
26 psl.
... producing a poem of little merit. But The Idiot Boy fared little better: No tale less deserved the labour that appears to have been bestowed upon this. It resembles a Flemish picture in the worthlessness of its design and the ...
... producing a poem of little merit. But The Idiot Boy fared little better: No tale less deserved the labour that appears to have been bestowed upon this. It resembles a Flemish picture in the worthlessness of its design and the ...
29 psl.
... produced in him a loss of confidence as a poet . When the second edition was published Lamb wrote to Wordsworth and protested very strongly at the way the Ancient Mariner had been handled and in subsequent editions. 26 E. Y. , 283 ...
... produced in him a loss of confidence as a poet . When the second edition was published Lamb wrote to Wordsworth and protested very strongly at the way the Ancient Mariner had been handled and in subsequent editions. 26 E. Y. , 283 ...
31 psl.
... produce of his labour ; there is little doing in his house in which his affections can be interested , and but little left in it which he can love.29 An important feature of the second edition of Lyrical Ballads was 29 E. Y. , pp . 313 ...
... produce of his labour ; there is little doing in his house in which his affections can be interested , and but little left in it which he can love.29 An important feature of the second edition of Lyrical Ballads was 29 E. Y. , pp . 313 ...
Turinys
1 | |
Lyrical Ballads 1798 | 46 |
Lyrical Ballads 1800 | 162 |
Preface 1800 Version with 1802 Variants | 286 |
Notes to the Poems | 315 |
Text of Lewti or the Circassian LoveChant | 361 |
Wordworths Appendix on Poetic Diction From the 1802 Edition of Lyrical Ballads | 365 |
Some Contemporary Criticisms of Lyrical Ballads | 371 |
Index of Titles | 398 |
Index of First Lines | 401 |
Kiti leidimai - Peržiūrėti viską
Lyrical Ballads With a Few Other Poems (1798) Samuel Taylor Coleridge,William Wordsworth Ribota peržiūra - 2020 |
Pagrindiniai terminai ir frazės
Alfoxden Ancient Mariner Ancyent Marinere appeared beautiful beneath Betty Betty Foy Biographia Literaria brother child church-yard Coleridge Coleridge's composition cottage Cottle dear delight Dorothy Wordsworth edition of Lyrical eyes father feelings Female Vagrant Goody Blake Goslar Grasmere grave green happy Harry Gill heard heart hills human Idiot Boy Johnny Lamb language LEONARD letter LEWTI Lines written living London look Lyrical Ballads Martha Ray Mary Moorman metre mind moon morning mountain nature Nether Stowey never night Nightingale oer objects pain passd passions perhaps pleasure poem Poet poetic poetry Preface prose Quantock Hills Quantocks Reader rock S.T. Coleridge Salisbury Plain second errat side Sockburn song soul spirit spring stanza stone stood style sweet tale tell thee things thorn thou thought Tintern Abbey tree Twas vale verse volume wild William William Wordsworth wind woods words Wordsworth write