Wordsworth to TennysonH. Frowde, Oxford University Press, 1913 |
Din interiorul cărții
Rezultatele 1 - 5 din 100
Pagina 6
... poet ceased to sing unless to an inner circle , what wisdom still , what understanding of the soul of things ! The priest remained , with the inherent sanctity which had justified his original investiture with the poet's mantle . We ...
... poet ceased to sing unless to an inner circle , what wisdom still , what understanding of the soul of things ! The priest remained , with the inherent sanctity which had justified his original investiture with the poet's mantle . We ...
Pagina 8
... Poet , would . It is not our province here to inquire whether he were primarily Poet because Philosopher , or Philosopher because Poet . For our purpose it is enough to appreciate his doctrine that Nature loves to clothe all her works ...
... Poet , would . It is not our province here to inquire whether he were primarily Poet because Philosopher , or Philosopher because Poet . For our purpose it is enough to appreciate his doctrine that Nature loves to clothe all her works ...
Pagina 13
... poet could not but be gay , In such a jocund company.8 Universal nature , in his creed , was designed to rejoice , and insists on rejoicing ; but no investiture with a prophet's mantle is required to qualify lovers of inspired verse to ...
... poet could not but be gay , In such a jocund company.8 Universal nature , in his creed , was designed to rejoice , and insists on rejoicing ; but no investiture with a prophet's mantle is required to qualify lovers of inspired verse to ...
Pagina 17
... — often in a setting as artistically satisfying as it is touchingly natural . The poet had studied man ; and while he sees cause to lament VOL . II B What man has made of man ; he recognizes with WILLIAM WORDSWORTH 17.
... — often in a setting as artistically satisfying as it is touchingly natural . The poet had studied man ; and while he sees cause to lament VOL . II B What man has made of man ; he recognizes with WILLIAM WORDSWORTH 17.
Pagina 19
... Poet often was lost to view in the Preacher . Is it too much to assume that to it also , to the absolute identity of the man and his inspiration , the indefinable magic of the earlier poetry must be traced ! Nowhere in the English ...
... Poet often was lost to view in the Preacher . Is it too much to assume that to it also , to the absolute identity of the man and his inspiration , the indefinable magic of the earlier poetry must be traced ! Nowhere in the English ...
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admirable angels Annabel Lee Arthur Hugh Clough Ballads beauty born breast breath bright Canto charm Christabel Christopher Smart cloud cold Coleridge Coventry Patmore Dante Gabriel Rossetti dark dead death delight divine doth Dramatic Lyrics dream earth English eyes fair fancy fear feel fire flowers glory golden grave hath hear heard heart Heaven hymn Ibid imagination inspiration Keats Kilmeny King kiss Lady land Leigh Hunt less light live Lord Martyr of Antioch Matthew Arnold melody mighty Minstrelsy mother Muse nature never night Nightingale o'er Omar Khayyám once passion pathos Poems poet poet's poetic poetry readers rose round Rubáiyát Santa Maura shadow Shelley silent sing sleep song Sonnets sorrow soul sound spirit stanzas star sweet tears tender Tennyson thee thine thou thought Twas verse voice wandering wild wind Wordsworth writer