Visionary Gleam: Forty Books from the Romantic PeriodWoodstock Books, 1993 - 243 ページ The age of English Romanticism began with the French Revolution and ended with the Reform Bill of 1832. The key works of the period share an assumption that change in the political system is possible. Wordsworth comments on forty such books. |
この書籍内から
検索結果1-3 / 90
3 ページ
... period viewed in a selection of outstanding books . Scholarly apparatus has again been kept to a minimum . Page and line references are normally to Woodstock facsimiles ( with the pagination of the original editions ) , and to other ...
... period viewed in a selection of outstanding books . Scholarly apparatus has again been kept to a minimum . Page and line references are normally to Woodstock facsimiles ( with the pagination of the original editions ) , and to other ...
35 ページ
... period leading up to July 1789 , show that he predicted a revolution in France that would embody the American spirit . When it came , he welcomed it in terms that laid him open to the sarcasm of Burke , but which were nonetheless ...
... period leading up to July 1789 , show that he predicted a revolution in France that would embody the American spirit . When it came , he welcomed it in terms that laid him open to the sarcasm of Burke , but which were nonetheless ...
224 ページ
Forty Books from the Romantic Period Jonathan Wordsworth. perceive as a Keatsian position : ' Whenever the mind of the artist suffers itself to be occupied , during its periods of creation , by any other predominant motive than the ...
Forty Books from the Romantic Period Jonathan Wordsworth. perceive as a Keatsian position : ' Whenever the mind of the artist suffers itself to be occupied , during its periods of creation , by any other predominant motive than the ...
他の版 - すべて表示
多く使われている語句
appeared ballads beauty become Bell Bowles Burke Byron character Coleridge Coleridge's comes create death delight described early edition effect English exist experience fact feeling final follows France French give Godwin hand happy Hazlitt heart hope human Hunt imagination important Keats known Lamb language later less letter living London look Lyrical mind moral nature never notes Observations offers once opening original Paine passion period Peter play pleasure poem poet poetic poetry political Political justice Prelude present Price principles published readers reason Romantic round ruined scene seems seen sense Shelley shows single society sonnets sort Southey spirit stage stanza story takes tells things thought true truth turn verse vision voice Wordsworth writing written