Tennyson: The Critical HeritageJohn Davies Jump Routledge & K. Paul, 1967 - Počet stran: 464 |
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Strana 91
... poet . There are in the character of every true poet , two elements , for one of which he is indebted to nature , for ... poetic associations , but supplies the very materials out of which many of them are formed.1 ' It may be thought ...
... poet . There are in the character of every true poet , two elements , for one of which he is indebted to nature , for ... poetic associations , but supplies the very materials out of which many of them are formed.1 ' It may be thought ...
Strana 92
... poet - the poetic temperament . And it appears clearly , not only from a comparison of the two volumes , but of different poems in the same volume , that , with him , the other element of poetic excel- lence - intellectual culture - is ...
... poet - the poetic temperament . And it appears clearly , not only from a comparison of the two volumes , but of different poems in the same volume , that , with him , the other element of poetic excel- lence - intellectual culture - is ...
Strana 436
... poetic ; so that , fatally as fashions of poetic thought ' tend to pass away - witness the proved mortality of The Excursion and The Prelude - we cannot well conceive that Tennyson's many - toned lament for his friend will ever take its ...
... poetic ; so that , fatally as fashions of poetic thought ' tend to pass away - witness the proved mortality of The Excursion and The Prelude - we cannot well conceive that Tennyson's many - toned lament for his friend will ever take its ...
Obsah
W J FOX on Poems Chiefly Lyrical 1830 1831 | 21 |
A H HALLAM on Poems Chiefly Lyrical 1830 1831 | 34 |
CHRISTOPHER NORTH on Poems Chiefly Lyrical | 50 |
Autorská práva | |
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admiration Æneid Alfred Alfred de Musset Alfred Tennyson Arthur Arthurian artist beauty called character charm colour criticism death deep delight delineation doubt dream emotion English Enoch Arden expression exquisite eyes faith fancy feeling garden genius Gerard Manley Hopkins give Guinevere heart Homer hope human idea ideal Idylls imagination intellect Keats kind King King Arthur Lady of Shalott Lancelot language less lines living Locksley Hall Lord Tennyson lyrical Maud means melody Memoriam mind mood moral nature never night noble object once Palace of Art Parnassian passage passion peculiar perfect perhaps picture poet poet's poetic poetry present Princess Queen Quotes readers seems sense Shakespeare Shelley Simeon Stylites song soul speak spirit stanza story style sweet Swinburne things Thomas Malory thought tion touch true truth verse Vivien voice volume whole words Wordsworth write