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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xii psl.
... style and a new spirit in poetry came over me, he recalled: It had to me something of the effect that arises from the turning up of the fresh soil, or of the first welcome breath of Spring . . . Coleridge and myself walked back to ...
... style and a new spirit in poetry came over me, he recalled: It had to me something of the effect that arises from the turning up of the fresh soil, or of the first welcome breath of Spring . . . Coleridge and myself walked back to ...
5 psl.
... style and this is truer of the poem in the 1798 version was derived from Percy's Reliques and from the English transla- tions of Bürger's Lenore6; but though ideally suited to its purpose, it was not the simple modern style for ...
... style and this is truer of the poem in the 1798 version was derived from Percy's Reliques and from the English transla- tions of Bürger's Lenore6; but though ideally suited to its purpose, it was not the simple modern style for ...
11 psl.
... style and language, which characterizes them all. Wordsworth directs our attention to this in the Advertisement to the 1798 edition and defends it at length in the Preface he wrote for the 1800 edition. The poems were a conscious ...
... style and language, which characterizes them all. Wordsworth directs our attention to this in the Advertisement to the 1798 edition and defends it at length in the Preface he wrote for the 1800 edition. The poems were a conscious ...
13 psl.
... style unlike that of his other work; they were, as Wordsworth informs the reader in his Adver- tisement, to be considered as experiments. He had already achieved some success in the style which he was to bring to perfection in Tintern ...
... style unlike that of his other work; they were, as Wordsworth informs the reader in his Adver- tisement, to be considered as experiments. He had already achieved some success in the style which he was to bring to perfection in Tintern ...
36 psl.
... style of folk poetry. They use rather a selection of language really used by men so as to avoid the literary and artificial language of much eighteenth-century poetry, and because this will bring them closer to human behaviour. Col ...
... style of folk poetry. They use rather a selection of language really used by men so as to avoid the literary and artificial language of much eighteenth-century poetry, and because this will bring them closer to human behaviour. Col ...
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) William Wordsworth,Samuel Taylor Coleridge Peržiūra negalima - 2014 |
Pagrindiniai terminai ir frazės
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