Studies in Interpretation: Keats-Clough-Matthew ArnoldG. P. Putnam's sons, 1896 - 221 páginas |
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Página 4
... past , with its tyrannies , errors , super- stitions ; and from the present , as from a Pisgah- height , could be seen stretching away into the hazy distance the paradise of man's desire , the true land of promise of which prophets had ...
... past , with its tyrannies , errors , super- stitions ; and from the present , as from a Pisgah- height , could be seen stretching away into the hazy distance the paradise of man's desire , the true land of promise of which prophets had ...
Página 20
... past - to the " beautiful tales which have come down from the ancient times of that beautiful Greece , " or the literature and legend - lore of the romantic middle ages . The texture of his work is thus not woven out of the stuff fur ...
... past - to the " beautiful tales which have come down from the ancient times of that beautiful Greece , " or the literature and legend - lore of the romantic middle ages . The texture of his work is thus not woven out of the stuff fur ...
Página 23
... past without in some way breathing into it a modern spirit , even if he does not , as often happens , select it expressly for its aptness as a medium for some latter - day gospel which he may feel called upon to expound . Thus Ten ...
... past without in some way breathing into it a modern spirit , even if he does not , as often happens , select it expressly for its aptness as a medium for some latter - day gospel which he may feel called upon to expound . Thus Ten ...
Página 24
... past , he never sought to relate them in any way to the special movements or prob- lems of the period in which he lived . Mr. Stedman has laid it down as a general principle that " where a work survives as an exception to the inherent ...
... past , he never sought to relate them in any way to the special movements or prob- lems of the period in which he lived . Mr. Stedman has laid it down as a general principle that " where a work survives as an exception to the inherent ...
Página 28
... past , clinging with obstinate per- sistency to that old order of ideas , to that cos- mology of marvel and mystery , which he felt to be slipping from the grasp of the world , with all that beautiful accumulation of legend and myth ...
... past , clinging with obstinate per- sistency to that old order of ideas , to that cos- mology of marvel and mystery , which he felt to be slipping from the grasp of the world , with all that beautiful accumulation of legend and myth ...
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