Wordsworth: Romantic Poetry and Revolution PoliticsManchester University Press, 1989 - Всего страниц: 203 |
Результаты поиска по книге
Результаты 1 – 3 из 23
Стр. 23
... turn'd his head To greet us and we saw a man worn down By sickness , gaunt and lean , with sunken cheeks And wasted limbs , his legs so long and lean That for my single self I look'd at them , Forgetful of the body they sustain'd ...
... turn'd his head To greet us and we saw a man worn down By sickness , gaunt and lean , with sunken cheeks And wasted limbs , his legs so long and lean That for my single self I look'd at them , Forgetful of the body they sustain'd ...
Стр. 76
... turns out to be the soldier's daughter , and who also turns out to be the sailor's wife . The story of the murder committed by the sailor is told once more by the dying woman , and the sailor determines now to face ' Justice ' and gives ...
... turns out to be the soldier's daughter , and who also turns out to be the sailor's wife . The story of the murder committed by the sailor is told once more by the dying woman , and the sailor determines now to face ' Justice ' and gives ...
Стр. 123
... turn , releasing in those poems a deeply personal expression of uncertainty and tension , continued to inform the ... Turning once more to Book VII , ' London ' , he describes the ' Babel din ' ( 234 : 157 ) of walking in the London ...
... turn , releasing in those poems a deeply personal expression of uncertainty and tension , continued to inform the ... Turning once more to Book VII , ' London ' , he describes the ' Babel din ' ( 234 : 157 ) of walking in the London ...
Содержание
Wordsworth and pastoral politics | 1 |
the pastoral tradition in early Wordsworth | 19 |
Poetry of alienated radicalism | 69 |
Авторские права | |
Не показаны другие разделы: 3
Другие издания - Просмотреть все
Часто встречающиеся слова и выражения
action active already appear argued attempt become beginning belief Benjamin Book Cambridge century claim common Commonwealthman concerned consequence continued Country course critical Crowe death described Descriptive Sketches early eighteenth eighteenth-century England English established evidence example experience expressed fact feeling France French give Government habits heart Hill human Imagination important influence issues James John landscape later Letter liberty lines London look Lyrical Ballads means memory mind moral nature once passage passive pastoral period philosophy poem poet poet's poetic poetry political position Prelude present principles published radical reading reason reference reflection remained republican respect response retirement reveals Revolution rhetoric Salisbury Plain seen sense September Massacres situation social society specifically spirit suggests things thought tradition turn University Press vagrant virtue vision Walk Whig Wordsworth writing written