The English Poets: Wordsworth to TennysonThomas Humphry Ward Macmillan, 1893 |
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Стр. 2
... feel , and therefore to become more actively and securely virtuous , ' — this is his own account of the purpose of his poetry . ( Letter to Lady Beaumont , May , 1807. ) He has given the same account in the Preface to The Excursion ...
... feel , and therefore to become more actively and securely virtuous , ' — this is his own account of the purpose of his poetry . ( Letter to Lady Beaumont , May , 1807. ) He has given the same account in the Preface to The Excursion ...
Стр. 7
... feeling , and man , as the fellow creature of nature , but also separate and beyond it in faculties and destiny - had not yet rendered up even to the mightiest of former poets all that they had in them to touch the human heart . And he ...
... feeling , and man , as the fellow creature of nature , but also separate and beyond it in faculties and destiny - had not yet rendered up even to the mightiest of former poets all that they had in them to touch the human heart . And he ...
Стр. 9
... feel that there was as much worthy of a poet's serious art in the agonies of the mother of the Idiot Boy , and the terrors of Peter Bell , as in the ' majestic pains ' of Laodamia and Dion . He has summed up his poetical doctrine with ...
... feel that there was as much worthy of a poet's serious art in the agonies of the mother of the Idiot Boy , and the terrors of Peter Bell , as in the ' majestic pains ' of Laodamia and Dion . He has summed up his poetical doctrine with ...
Стр. 10
... feeling with profound thought : the fine balance of truth in observing , with the imaginative faculty in modifying ... feels the riddle of the worla , and may help to unravel it . To carry on the feelings of childhood into the powers of ...
... feeling with profound thought : the fine balance of truth in observing , with the imaginative faculty in modifying ... feels the riddle of the worla , and may help to unravel it . To carry on the feelings of childhood into the powers of ...
Стр. 11
... feeling which was not genuine and natural , any sentiment or impulse short of or beyond the actual impression which caused them , so with the most jealous strictness he measured his words . He gave them their full swing if they answered ...
... feeling which was not genuine and natural , any sentiment or impulse short of or beyond the actual impression which caused them , so with the most jealous strictness he measured his words . He gave them their full swing if they answered ...
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Ancient Mariner ballads beauty beneath bird blank verse breast breath bright Brignall brow Byron calm Charles Lamb Childe Harold Christabel cloud cold Coleridge County Guy dark dead dear death deep delight doth dream earth EDWARD DOWDEN Emily Brontë eyes fair fear feel flowers gaze gentle grave green hand Hartley Coleridge hast hath hear heard heart heaven hill hope hour Keats lady lake Leigh Hunt light live lone look Lyrical Ballads mind moon mountains nature ne'er never night o'er once passion pleasure poems poet poetic poetry ROBERT SOUTHEY Roncesvalles rose round Samian wine shade Shelley sigh silent sing sleep smile song sonnets sorrow soul spirit stars stood stream sweet tears thee thine things thou art thought trees Twas verse voice wandering waves weary wild wind wings Wordsworth youth