Romanticism and Transcendence: Wordsworth, Coleridge, and the Religious ImaginationUniversity of Missouri Press, 2003 - Всего страниц: 146 "Grounded in the thought of Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Romanticism and Transcendence explores the religious dimensions of imagination in the Romantic tradition, both theoretically and in the poetry of Wordsworth and Coleridge. J. Robert Barth suggests that we may look to Coleridge for the theoretical grounding of the view of religious imagination proposed in this book, but that it is in Wordsworth above all that we see this imagination at work."--Jacket |
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Стр. vii
... Poet, Death, and Immortality The Prelude, Book 5 30 III. Time and the Timeless The Temporal Imagination in The Prelude 41 IV. “The Feeding Source” Imagination and the Transcendent in The Prelude 56 V. The Role of Humankind in the Poetry ...
... Poet, Death, and Immortality The Prelude, Book 5 30 III. Time and the Timeless The Temporal Imagination in The Prelude 41 IV. “The Feeding Source” Imagination and the Transcendent in The Prelude 56 V. The Role of Humankind in the Poetry ...
Стр. 2
... poetic text.4 This recent attention to the religious dimensions of Romantic texts. 2. See “The Symbiosis of Coleridge and Wordsworth.” 3. Wordsworth and the Question of “Romantic Religion,” 36–37 (emphasis added). 4. Ibid., 10, 9. 5. The ...
... poetic text.4 This recent attention to the religious dimensions of Romantic texts. 2. See “The Symbiosis of Coleridge and Wordsworth.” 3. Wordsworth and the Question of “Romantic Religion,” 36–37 (emphasis added). 4. Ibid., 10, 9. 5. The ...
Стр. 3
... poets remains rather conventional , accepting the principle that meaning can inhere in poetry , and that words do some- times stand still enough for us to take in at least some measure of their meaning . I also take the view that poetry ...
... poets remains rather conventional , accepting the principle that meaning can inhere in poetry , and that words do some- times stand still enough for us to take in at least some measure of their meaning . I also take the view that poetry ...
Стр. 4
... poet to create a poem or the painter a painting. It is also, indeed first of all, the faculty that permits the human person to give meaning to the world and to his or her life. Ignatius Loyola was not in the least an artist—as anyone ...
... poet to create a poem or the painter a painting. It is also, indeed first of all, the faculty that permits the human person to give meaning to the world and to his or her life. Ignatius Loyola was not in the least an artist—as anyone ...
Стр. 5
... poets, and playwrights. And four hundred and fifty years later, Jesuits are still active in the arts, from poet Daniel Berrigan and painter William Hart McNichols, to playwrights and di- rectors Ernest Ferlita and Bill Cain, to dancer ...
... poets, and playwrights. And four hundred and fifty years later, Jesuits are still active in the arts, from poet Daniel Berrigan and painter William Hart McNichols, to playwrights and di- rectors Ernest Ferlita and Bill Cain, to dancer ...
Содержание
1 | |
15 | |
The Poet Death and Immortality | 30 |
The Temporal Imagination in The Prelude | 41 |
The Feeding Source | 56 |
Wordsworth and Coleridge | 72 |
Prayer and Blessing in The Rime of | 89 |
In the Midnight Wood | 104 |
Religious Imagination | 119 |
Works Cited | 137 |
Index | 143 |
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Romanticism and Transcendence: Wordsworth, Coleridge, and the Religious ... J. Robert Barth Ограниченный просмотр - 2003 |
Romanticism and Transcendence: Wordsworth, Coleridge, and the Religious ... J. Robert Barth Просмотр фрагмента - 2003 |
Часто встречающиеся слова и выражения
Ancient Mariner beauty begins Biographia Literaria blessing Boy of Winander Christ Christabel Christian Coleridge's connect the misery Conversation Poems creation creature criticism death deeply divine dream earth encounter Ernest de Selincourt eternal experience faculty faith feeling finite Geraldine gift God’s hear heart heaven human humankind Ignatius Ignatius Loyola images immortality Jesuit John John Beer journey landscape language Leoline light lines literary living Loyola Mariner's meaning ment mind Mount Snowdon move mystery one’s passage perhaps poet poet's poetic poetry pray prayer Prelude Rahner relationship religion religious imagination revealed Romantic Romanticism sacramental Saint Samuel Taylor Coleridge says scene seems sense Snowdon solitude soul spirit Spiritual Exercises spots Steiner Stephen Parrish suggest supernatural symbol T. S. Eliot temporal things thou thought Tintern Abbey touch tradition transcendent reality translucence ture University Press vision William Wordsworth word Wordsworth and Coleridge world of Nature