Lectures on Poetry and General LiteratureRoutledge/Thoemmes Press, 1995 - 394 ページ |
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... pure , I say feel , because , abstract them as we may , every idea we can frame of spiritual es- sences will be crudely material , - we feel that all these must be somewhere within that impenetrable veil , which is itself the only ...
... pure , I say feel , because , abstract them as we may , every idea we can frame of spiritual es- sences will be crudely material , - we feel that all these must be somewhere within that impenetrable veil , which is itself the only ...
183 ページ
... pure description holds ( not ) the place of sense , " but occupies its own picturesque position with independent and due effect , yet few com- positions in verse can be purely preceptive , without the " aid of foreign ornament ; " nor ...
... pure description holds ( not ) the place of sense , " but occupies its own picturesque position with independent and due effect , yet few com- positions in verse can be purely preceptive , without the " aid of foreign ornament ; " nor ...
191 ページ
... with oaks that form'd fantastic bowers , Waving aloft their towering branches proud , In borrow'd tinges from the eastern cloud , - Gave inspiration pure as ever flow'd , And genuine NO . V. 191 VARIOUS CLASSES OF POETRY .
... with oaks that form'd fantastic bowers , Waving aloft their towering branches proud , In borrow'd tinges from the eastern cloud , - Gave inspiration pure as ever flow'd , And genuine NO . V. 191 VARIOUS CLASSES OF POETRY .
目次
THE PREEMINENCE OF POETRY AMONG THE FINE ARTS | 1 |
THE FORM OF POETRY | 73 |
THE DICTION OF POETRY | 114 |
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多く使われている語句
admiration Æneid affections amidst ancient beauty blank verse cadence character circumstances colour composition contemporaries death delight diction Dryden earth Egyptians eloquence employed English equally excellence exquisite Faerie Queene fancy feel genius glory grace Greece Greek hand harmony heart heaven Henry Kirke White hieroglyphics honour human ideas Iliad images imagination invention Joanna Baillie John Clare kind labours Lamech language latter learning less lines literature living Lord Lord Byron ment metre Milton mind modern moral nations nature never once painting Paradise Lost passage passions peculiar perfect perpetual Pisistratus pleonasm poem poet poetical poetry present prose reader rhyme Robert Burns Roman Saracens scarcely scene sculpture sentiments song soul sound Spenserian stanza spirit splendour stanzas stars strains style sublime syllables taste thee theme things thou thought tion tongue touch truth verse Virgil whole words writing