The Treatment of Nature in English Poetry Between Pope and WordsworthUniversity of Chicago Press, 1909 - 388 ページ |
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... feelings out of which the thoughts and feelings of his own epoch grow . He has his natural place in the development . The significance of his work rests in the fact that while it directs the future it also sums up the past . The first ...
... feelings out of which the thoughts and feelings of his own epoch grow . He has his natural place in the development . The significance of his work rests in the fact that while it directs the future it also sums up the past . The first ...
vi ページ
... feelings out of which the thoughts and feelings of his own epoch grow . He has his natural place in the development . The significance of his work rests in the fact that while it directs the future it also sums up the past . The first ...
... feelings out of which the thoughts and feelings of his own epoch grow . He has his natural place in the development . The significance of his work rests in the fact that while it directs the future it also sums up the past . The first ...
xv ページ
... feeling for Nature in Semitic and Indo- Humboldt was the first to attack Schiller's view . He said that after a full reading of Greek and Roman authors he found himself unable to accept Schiller's statement without many reservations ...
... feeling for Nature in Semitic and Indo- Humboldt was the first to attack Schiller's view . He said that after a full reading of Greek and Roman authors he found himself unable to accept Schiller's statement without many reservations ...
xvi ページ
... feeling his enthusiastic joy in the presence of Nature . But he feared this joy and counted it a part of the concupiscence of the flesh except as it became an avenue to communion with the divine spirit . His indictment against the ...
... feeling his enthusiastic joy in the presence of Nature . But he feared this joy and counted it a part of the concupiscence of the flesh except as it became an avenue to communion with the divine spirit . His indictment against the ...
xviii ページ
... Feeling for Nature in Scottish Poetry . " The first volume begins with the early romances and national epics , and takes up the chief poets down to James VI . The second volume is devoted to the modern period from Ramsay to David Gray ...
... Feeling for Nature in Scottish Poetry . " The first volume begins with the early romances and national epics , and takes up the chief poets down to James VI . The second volume is devoted to the modern period from Ramsay to David Gray ...
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多く使われている語句
Allan Ramsay Ambrose Philips appeared artists beauty birds Brown charm classical clouds color Cowper delight Dryden Dyer early Eclogues eighteenth century England engravings Essay expression facts feeling fiction flowers forest Fugitive Poets Gainsborough Gallery garden George Morland Gilpin Gray green Grongar Hill groves hills Ibid interest John Johnson's English Poets Joseph Warton Keswick Lady Winchilsea lake Lake District landscape landscape art Leasowes letter lines London love of Nature mountains night observation painted painter passages Pastorals Paul Sandby period phrases picturesque pleasure poems poetic poetry of Nature Pope portrait Ramsay Richard Wilson river romantic Salvator Rosa says scenery scenes Scotland Shenstone similes similitudes Skiddaw song spirit spring streams Summary passim taste Thomas Thomas Gainsborough Thomson thought tion Tour travels trees vale Walpole Warton wild William Wilson winds winter woods words Wordsworth
人気のある引用
149 ページ - The schoolboy, wandering through the wood To pull the primrose gay, Starts, the new voice of Spring to hear, And imitates thy lay. What time the pea puts on the bloom Thou fliest thy vocal vale, An annual guest in other lands, Another Spring to hail. Sweet bird ! thy bower is ever green, Thy sky is ever clear ; Thou hast no sorrow in thy song, No winter in thy year!
94 ページ - Be full, ye courts ; be great who will : Search for peace with all your skill : Open wide the lofty door, Seek her on the marble floor. In vain...
158 ページ - All that the genial ray of morning gilds, And all that echoes to the song of even, All that the mountain's sheltering bosom shields, And all 'the dread magnificence of heaven, O how canst thou renounce, and hope to be forgiven ! X.
200 ページ - Arcadian plain. Pure stream, in whose transparent wave My youthful limbs I wont to lave ; No torrents stain thy limpid source, No rocks impede thy dimpling course, That sweetly warbles o'er its bed, With white round polished pebbles spread...
29 ページ - Over the river of Thames past hee ; When eighty merchants of London came, And downe they knelt upon their knee. " O yee are welcome, rich merchants ; Good saylors, welcome unto mee.
xvi ページ - I am in my own farm, says he, and here I shoot strong and tenacious roots : I have caught hold of the earth, to use a gardener's phrase, and neither my enemies nor my friends will find it an easy matter to transplant me again.
178 ページ - One impulse from a vernal wood May teach you more of man, Of moral evil and of good Than all the sages can.
180 ページ - I have some favourite flowers in spring, among which are the mountain-daisy, the harebell, the foxglove, the wild-brier rose, the budding birch, and the hoary hawthorn, that I view and hang over with particular delight.
111 ページ - And loves unfelt attract him. Not a breeze Flies o'er the meadow, not a cloud imbibes The setting Sun's effulgence, not a strain From all the tenants of the warbling shade Ascends, but whence his bosom can partake Fresh pleasure, unreproved.
40 ページ - the cooling western breeze," In the next line, it " whispers through the trees: " If crystal streams " with pleasing murmurs creep...