William WordsworthHarold Bloom Chelsea House, 2007 - Всего страниц: 280 Each title features: - A complex critical portrait of one of the most influential writers in the world - An introductory essay by Harold Bloom. |
Результаты поиска по книге
Результаты 1 – 3 из 42
Стр. 54
... child , her best pupil , as a charmed circle in which his own reflection seems united with all the reflections of the visible world surrounding the mother . Nature does not begin to seem " external " to the infant , because it is always ...
... child , her best pupil , as a charmed circle in which his own reflection seems united with all the reflections of the visible world surrounding the mother . Nature does not begin to seem " external " to the infant , because it is always ...
Стр. 151
... child a foster - child nursed by mother earth ( so he has already lost something ; there never was a time when he had not lost it ) ; then , in a curious and unassimilable satirical bit , he dandles and pokes the child some more , and ...
... child a foster - child nursed by mother earth ( so he has already lost something ; there never was a time when he had not lost it ) ; then , in a curious and unassimilable satirical bit , he dandles and pokes the child some more , and ...
Стр. 155
... child nor the self but the soul . Yet in the sentence of " Self - Reliance " that I began with , much of Emerson's ... Child is Father of the Man . " Emerson says , “ Is the acorn better than the oak which is its fulness and completion ...
... child nor the self but the soul . Yet in the sentence of " Self - Reliance " that I began with , much of Emerson's ... Child is Father of the Man . " Emerson says , “ Is the acorn better than the oak which is its fulness and completion ...
Содержание
Two Roads to Wordsworth | 11 |
Tintern Abbey | 23 |
The Prelude and the Love of Man | 47 |
Авторские права | |
Не показаны другие разделы: 9
Другие издания - Просмотреть все
Часто встречающиеся слова и выражения
affections appears become Beggar Blake Book called Cambridge characters Chartreuse child childhood Coleridge Coleridge's consciousness criticism dark death Dennis Taylor Dorothy Dorothy Wordsworth dramatic poem early earth Emerson English essay Excursion experience external fact fear feelings Freud genius Geoffrey Hartman glory Grasmere Harold Bloom Hawkshead hear heart heaven Hermit human imagination immortality influence Intimations Ode kind landscape language lines literary Lyrical Ballads M. H. Abrams memory metaphor Milton mind mother myth nature Nature's Oxford Paradise Lost passage passion past perception play poet poet's poetic Prelude present question reader reading repression Romantic Romanticism scene seems sense sight signifier simple Simplon Simplon Pass solipsism solitude song soul speaking spirit spots stage stanza structure sublime symbol theme things thou thoughts Tintern Abbey tradition trope University Press verse visible vision visionary voice William Wordsworth words Wordsworth's Poetry Wordsworthian writing written Yale University