Biographia Literaria, 1817, Volumen2Scolar Press, 1971 - 310 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 18
Página 109
... scene * f6 Mr. Wordsworth's having judiciously adopted " con- course wild " in this passage for a wild scene " as it stood in the former edition , encourages me to hazard a remark , Would enter unawares into his mind With all its solemn ...
... scene * f6 Mr. Wordsworth's having judiciously adopted " con- course wild " in this passage for a wild scene " as it stood in the former edition , encourages me to hazard a remark , Would enter unawares into his mind With all its solemn ...
Página 110
... scene , " even in the sentence in which it is retained . DRYDEN , and he only in his more careless verses , was the first as far as my researches have discovered , who for the convenience of rhyme used this word in the vague sense ...
... scene , " even in the sentence in which it is retained . DRYDEN , and he only in his more careless verses , was the first as far as my researches have discovered , who for the convenience of rhyme used this word in the vague sense ...
Página 273
... scene of the play might have taken place as well if Bertram and his vessel had been driven in by a common hard gale , or from want of provi- sions . The first act would have indeed lost its greatest and most sonorous picture ; a scene ...
... scene of the play might have taken place as well if Bertram and his vessel had been driven in by a common hard gale , or from want of provi- sions . The first act would have indeed lost its greatest and most sonorous picture ; a scene ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Términos y frases comunes
admiration Aldobrand ANSW appear beauty Bertram blank verse character child common composition critic Cuxhaven DANE dear friend defect delight diction drama Edinburgh Review effect Elbe English equally excellence excitement expression feelings former French genius German German language greater Greek ground guage Hamburg heart human imagery images imagination imitation instance interest judgement Klopstock lady language least less lines low and rustic Lubec Lyrical Ballads MADRIGALE Martha Ray means ment metre metrical Milton mind moral nature object odes passage passion perhaps person philosophical Pindar pleasure poem poet poet's poetic poetry present prose racter Ratzeburg reader reason rhyme S. T. COLERIDGE scene seemed sense sentences Shakespeare Sonnet soul specimens spirit stanzas style surprize sweet sympathy taste thing thou thought tion tragedy truth Venus and Adonis verse whole words Wordsworth writers