Biographia Literaria, Volumen2 |
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Página 221
( The sciences indeed may and will give a high and pure pleasure ; and the Fine Arts may lead to important truth , and be in various ways useful in the ordinary meaning of the word ; but these are not the direct and characteristic ends ...
( The sciences indeed may and will give a high and pure pleasure ; and the Fine Arts may lead to important truth , and be in various ways useful in the ordinary meaning of the word ; but these are not the direct and characteristic ends ...
Página 240
10 15 20 O lady ! we receive but what we give , And in our life alone does nature live ! Ours is her wedding - garment , ours her shroud ! And would we aught behold of higher worth , Than that inanimate cold world allow'd To the poor ...
10 15 20 O lady ! we receive but what we give , And in our life alone does nature live ! Ours is her wedding - garment , ours her shroud ! And would we aught behold of higher worth , Than that inanimate cold world allow'd To the poor ...
Página 253
ON POESY OR ART Man communicates by articulation of sounds , and para . mountly by the memory in the ear ; nature by the impres . sion of bounds and surfaces on the eye , and through the eye it gives significance and appropriation ...
ON POESY OR ART Man communicates by articulation of sounds , and para . mountly by the memory in the ear ; nature by the impres . sion of bounds and surfaces on the eye , and through the eye it gives significance and appropriation ...
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Biographia Literaria Wordsworth Collection,Samuel Taylor 1772-1834 Coleridge, Ass Sin vista previa disponible - 2016 |
Términos y frases comunes
admiration answer appear attention beauty become Biog called cause character Coleridge Coleridge's common composed connected consists critic definition delight distinction edition effect English equally Essay excellence excitement existence expression feeling former genius German give greater hand heart human images imagination imitation immediate individual instance interest Italy kind language least less Letters light lines living look means metre Milton mind moral nature never object observed once opinion original PAGE passage passed passion perhaps person philosopher pleasure poem poet poetic poetry possible Preface present principle produced prose published reader reason reference respect Review seems sense Shakespeare sound speaking spirit stanza style taste thing thought tion true truth universal whole Wordsworth writings written