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. |
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Стр. 171
... reading took up as much of his time as ice - skating , bird nesting , horseback riding , and boat racing . Just as he knew Philip Braithwaite , John Gibson , and the Castlehow boys , so too he knew and " conversed " with Helen Maria ...
... reading took up as much of his time as ice - skating , bird nesting , horseback riding , and boat racing . Just as he knew Philip Braithwaite , John Gibson , and the Castlehow boys , so too he knew and " conversed " with Helen Maria ...
Стр. 228
... reader rather than an audience and has a particular literary and poetic intention . What emerges is a kind of poetic ... reading through the unfolding ironies and subtleties of tone in the poem itself . The full potential of such a form ...
... reader rather than an audience and has a particular literary and poetic intention . What emerges is a kind of poetic ... reading through the unfolding ironies and subtleties of tone in the poem itself . The full potential of such a form ...
Стр. 232
... reading ' ( 106 ) . Later Lamb sums up his own ( and what we might call the Romantic ) position : What we see upon a stage is body and bodily action ; what we are conscious of in reading is almost exclusively the mind , and its ...
... reading ' ( 106 ) . Later Lamb sums up his own ( and what we might call the Romantic ) position : What we see upon a stage is body and bodily action ; what we are conscious of in reading is almost exclusively the mind , and its ...
Содержание
Two Roads to Wordsworth | 11 |
Tintern Abbey | 23 |
The Prelude and the Love of Man | 47 |
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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