Studies in Interpretation: Keats-Clough-Matthew ArnoldG. P. Putnam's sons, 1896 - 221 páginas |
Dentro del libro
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Página 4
... hearts ' desire , And stuff at hand , plastic as they could wish , - Were called upon to exercise their skill , Not in Utopia , -subterranean fields , - Or some secreted island , Heaven knows where ! But in the very world , which is the ...
... hearts ' desire , And stuff at hand , plastic as they could wish , - Were called upon to exercise their skill , Not in Utopia , -subterranean fields , - Or some secreted island , Heaven knows where ! But in the very world , which is the ...
Página 9
... heart " ; and became a continental influence largely because , amidst all his colossal egoism , and all his real and affected flippancy and mis- anthropy , he expressed with such magnificent and persistent power men's sense of the ruin ...
... heart " ; and became a continental influence largely because , amidst all his colossal egoism , and all his real and affected flippancy and mis- anthropy , he expressed with such magnificent and persistent power men's sense of the ruin ...
Página 19
... heart - easing things . " Recoiling thus from both the temper and the mood of modern life , Keats consciously left the obstinate questions that came up for considera- tion , the ancient problems in their modern shapes , JOHN KEATS . 19.
... heart - easing things . " Recoiling thus from both the temper and the mood of modern life , Keats consciously left the obstinate questions that came up for considera- tion , the ancient problems in their modern shapes , JOHN KEATS . 19.
Página 40
... heart , and soul Of all my moral being . " Now , for the critic of Keats there is particu- lar interest in the passages in which Words- worth expounds the characteristics of the second stage of his spiritual unfolding , above touched ...
... heart , and soul Of all my moral being . " Now , for the critic of Keats there is particu- lar interest in the passages in which Words- worth expounds the characteristics of the second stage of his spiritual unfolding , above touched ...
Página 41
... heart by which we live , Thanks to its tenderness , its joys , and fears , To me the meanest flower that blows can give Thoughts that do often lie too deep for tears . " Would Keats , had he lived , have presently passed out of the ...
... heart by which we live , Thanks to its tenderness , its joys , and fears , To me the meanest flower that blows can give Thoughts that do often lie too deep for tears . " Would Keats , had he lived , have presently passed out of the ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Studies in Interpretation: Keats, Clough, Matthew Arnold William Henry Hudson Vista de fragmentos - 1969 |
Términos y frases comunes
admirable æsthetic ARTHUR HUGH CLOUGH beauty believe Berkeley Bothie of Tober-na-Vuolich CALIFORNIA LIBRARY character characteristic Claude Clough creed criticism despair Dipsychus dream earth emotion Empedocles on Etna Endymion English Essays expression eyes fact faith feeling Forman's edition G. P. PUTNAM'S SONS genius Grande Chartreuse habit heart hope human influence inspiration intellectual interesting John Keats Keats Keats's less letters Literature live look man's Marcus Aurelius Matthew Arnold melancholy ment mental mind modern mood moral nature Obermann once ourselves pagan passage philosophic poem poet poet's poetic poetry present problems Prose Remains question reality realize relation religious Rugby Rugby Chapel Senancour sense Shelley skepticism soul speculation spiritual Stanzas struggle temper tendencies things thou thought tion touch true truth turn UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA utterances verse vision words Wordsworth writes young