Byron: The Critical HeritageAndrew Rutherford Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1970 - Всего страниц: 513 |
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Стр. 167
... genius and vice - power and profligacy - than in any poem which had ever before been written in the English , or indeed in any other modern language . Had the wickedness been less inextric- ably mingled with the beauty and the grace ...
... genius and vice - power and profligacy - than in any poem which had ever before been written in the English , or indeed in any other modern language . Had the wickedness been less inextric- ably mingled with the beauty and the grace ...
Стр. 226
... genius . I do not think the answer unanswerable ; though genius may say a great deal for being left to its impulses . But at all events , if the genius is worth having its omissions supplied by others , others ( ecce signum ) 1 will ...
... genius . I do not think the answer unanswerable ; though genius may say a great deal for being left to its impulses . But at all events , if the genius is worth having its omissions supplied by others , others ( ecce signum ) 1 will ...
Стр. 318
... genius . He became the Type , the Ideal of the state of mind he represented , and the world willingly associated his person with his works , because they thus seemed actually to incorporate , and in no undignified or ungraceful shape ...
... genius . He became the Type , the Ideal of the state of mind he represented , and the world willingly associated his person with his works , because they thus seemed actually to incorporate , and in no undignified or ungraceful shape ...
Содержание
Hours of Idleness 1807 | 23 |
English Bards and Scotch Reviewers 1809 | 33 |
S GEORGE ELLIS Quarterly Review 1812 133 | 44 |
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admiration beauty Blackwood's Magazine Byron's poetry Cain Cantos character Childe Harold Coleridge contemporaries criticism death delight divine Don Juan dramatic Edinburgh Review effect emotions England English English poetry evil expression Extract from letter eyes fame faults feeling genius Giaour Goethe heart Henry Crabb Robinson hero human imagination imitation intellectual interest Keats language least less lines literary literature living Lord Byron Manfred Marino Faliero melancholy mind misanthropy modern moral nature never noble opinion passages passion Percy Bysshe Shelley perhaps person poem poet poetical political popular praise present prose readers satire scene scorn Scott seems sense sentiment Shakespeare Shelley Shelley's Siege of Corinth sincerity Sir Walter Scott sorrow soul Southey spirit stanzas strength style sympathy talent taste things thought tion true truth verse Vision of Judgment vulgar whole words Wordsworth write written wrote