Studies in Interpretation: Keats-Clough-Matthew ArnoldG. P. Putnam's sons, 1896 - 221 páginas |
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Página 10
... Realizing the terrible " revulsion occasioned by the atrocities of demagogues , and the re - estab- lishment of successive tyrannies in France , " he none the less clung tenaciously to the belief that the panic of fear and horror ...
... Realizing the terrible " revulsion occasioned by the atrocities of demagogues , and the re - estab- lishment of successive tyrannies in France , " he none the less clung tenaciously to the belief that the panic of fear and horror ...
Página 37
... realize something of that wonderful power of spon- taneous sympathy with Hellenic ways of look- ing at things which remains , when all is said , one of the most marvellous characteristics of Keats's genius . But it is with his more ...
... realize something of that wonderful power of spon- taneous sympathy with Hellenic ways of look- ing at things which remains , when all is said , one of the most marvellous characteristics of Keats's genius . But it is with his more ...
Página 40
... realize how much his mature mind had itself brought to nature , and felt well pleased to recognize in her and in the language of his senses , as they responded to her noble and benign influence , 66 The anchor of my purest thoughts ...
... realize how much his mature mind had itself brought to nature , and felt well pleased to recognize in her and in the language of his senses , as they responded to her noble and benign influence , 66 The anchor of my purest thoughts ...
Página 45
... realize that to treat nature as the vital and im- mediate source of feelings which we ourselves have thrust upon her out of our own lives , is a practice to be held as morbid in origin , no mat- ter how striking and dramatically ...
... realize that to treat nature as the vital and im- mediate source of feelings which we ourselves have thrust upon her out of our own lives , is a practice to be held as morbid in origin , no mat- ter how striking and dramatically ...
Página 80
... thou come To take , ere they are lost , their sum . " It is worth while to begin our study of Clough with these characteristic citations , since they help us to realize at once certain funda- mental 80 STUDIES IN INTERPRETATION .
... thou come To take , ere they are lost , their sum . " It is worth while to begin our study of Clough with these characteristic citations , since they help us to realize at once certain funda- mental 80 STUDIES IN INTERPRETATION .
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