Wordsworth: Romantic Poetry and Revolution PoliticsManchester University Press, 1989 - Всего страниц: 203 |
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Стр. 60
... Government , presents him with no such misgivings ; the situation is clear : The fact is that the King and lords and commons , by what is termed the omnipotence of parliament , have constitutionally the right of enacting whatever laws ...
... Government , presents him with no such misgivings ; the situation is clear : The fact is that the King and lords and commons , by what is termed the omnipotence of parliament , have constitutionally the right of enacting whatever laws ...
Стр. 153
... government for ourselves.20 The ' right to liberty of conscience ' referred to by Price is denied through the process described by Wordsworth as having ' legalised exclusion ' ; where the poet calls for the ending of ' sensual state and ...
... government for ourselves.20 The ' right to liberty of conscience ' referred to by Price is denied through the process described by Wordsworth as having ' legalised exclusion ' ; where the poet calls for the ending of ' sensual state and ...
Стр. 170
... Government's dealings with the Napoleonic armies in Portugal led him to write a pamphlet damning the Government , and Wellesly in particular , for their preparedness to treat with the French tyrant at the expense of the Spanish and ...
... Government's dealings with the Napoleonic armies in Portugal led him to write a pamphlet damning the Government , and Wellesly in particular , for their preparedness to treat with the French tyrant at the expense of the Spanish and ...
Содержание
Wordsworth and pastoral politics | 1 |
the pastoral tradition in early Wordsworth | 19 |
Poetry of alienated radicalism | 69 |
Авторские права | |
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aesthetic Akenside argued Beattie Beaupuy become belief Benjamin Betz Book Borders of Vision Cambridge century Coleridge Commonwealthman contemporary context Convention of Cintra conviction Crowe Crowe's described Descriptive Sketches dissident Whig Dorothy early eighteenth England English Essay experience feeling female vagrant France French Revolution Gill Godwin Gothic human Hutcheson Ibid ideology Imagination Jacobin James John Jonathan Wordsworth Kilve labour landscape Letter to Llandaff Lewesdon Hill liberty lines London London Corresponding Society Lyrical Ballads M. H. Abrams mind Molesworth moral nature Old Whig Oxford passage pastoral patriotic philosophy picturesque poem poet poet's poetic poetry Prelude principles Racedown radical political radical Whig Real Whig reference reflection republican retirement reveals revolutionary rhetoric Salisbury Plain sense Sidney Simon Lee Simplon Pass social society spirit Thelwall theme Thomas Hollis Thomson Tintern Abbey tradition University Press virtue wagoner Walk William Wordsworth wise passiveness Wordsworth's political writing