Lectures and Addresses on Literary and Social Topics, 2 tomasTicknor and Fields, 1859 - 318 psl. |
Knygos viduje
Rezultatai 6–10 iš 76
100 psl.
... poet of the few ; the border minstrelsy of Scott exhausted itself even during his own life ; and when that long , passionate wail of Byronism had died away , -a phase of tempestuous feeling through which every man , I suppose , passes ...
... poet of the few ; the border minstrelsy of Scott exhausted itself even during his own life ; and when that long , passionate wail of Byronism had died away , -a phase of tempestuous feeling through which every man , I suppose , passes ...
102 psl.
... poet ) , my Goethe , or my Dante , Shakspeare , Shelley , Wordsworth , or Tennyson ; and I know what it is to feel the jar of nerve gradually cease , and the darkness in which all life had robed itself to the imagination become light ...
... poet ) , my Goethe , or my Dante , Shakspeare , Shelley , Wordsworth , or Tennyson ; and I know what it is to feel the jar of nerve gradually cease , and the darkness in which all life had robed itself to the imagination become light ...
107 psl.
... poetic state ; if not the creative state , that in which we can make poetry , at least the receptive state in which we feel poetry . Therefore , let no man think that , because he cannot appreciate the verse of Milton or Wordsworth ...
... poetic state ; if not the creative state , that in which we can make poetry , at least the receptive state in which we feel poetry . Therefore , let no man think that , because he cannot appreciate the verse of Milton or Wordsworth ...
108 psl.
... poet breathes . " High instincts , " Wordsworth calls them , " Before which our mortal nature Did tremble , like a guilty thing surprised : ..... those first affections , Those shadowy recollections Which , be they what they may , Are ...
... poet breathes . " High instincts , " Wordsworth calls them , " Before which our mortal nature Did tremble , like a guilty thing surprised : ..... those first affections , Those shadowy recollections Which , be they what they may , Are ...
111 psl.
... poets ; so much so , that I have heard him characterized as a Quaker among poets . And yet he is the author of the sublimest ode in the English language , the Inti- mations of immortality from the recollections of childhood . And for ...
... poets ; so much so , that I have heard him characterized as a Quaker among poets . And yet he is the author of the sublimest ode in the English language , the Inti- mations of immortality from the recollections of childhood . And for ...
Kiti leidimai - Peržiūrėti viską
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 |
Pagrindiniai terminai ir frazės
Atheism Athenæum beauty become believe belongs better Brighton brother called cause character Chartist Christian Church Church of England Church of Rome classes consecrated corn laws criticism difference duty Early Closing England English evil expression false feeling felt free inquiry give hand heart heaven High Churchism honour hour human imagination infidelity influence intellectual labour language Lecture liberty living look Lord Byron Macbeth manly matter mean mind moral Nabal nation nature never noble Pantheism pass passage passion persons Philip Van Artevelde poem poet poetic Poetry political poor principle question rank reason red harvest religious respect Robertson Sabbath seems selfishness sense Shakspeare society sonnet soul speak spirit stand symbols sympathy taste tell thing thought tion to-night town Tractarian true truth understand voice vote wealth whole words Wordsworth young