| Kay Redfield Jamison - 1996 - 388 ページ
...brooding dispositions. The act of creating becomes, as Byron described it, essential in its own right: Tis to create, and in creating live A being more intense,...I do now. What am I? Nothing; but not so art thou, Soul of my thought! with whom I traverse earth, Invisible but gazing, as I glow Mix'd with thy spirit,... | |
| James Soderholm - 1996 - 218 ページ
...participating in rituals of enchantment, those creative acts by which, as Childe Harold enticingly puts it, "we endow / With form our fancy, gaining as we give / The life we image" (CPW 2:78). These words sing an incantation, a spell that binds readers to the possibility of transfiguring... | |
| Karl Simms - 1997 - 318 ページ
...biographical snippet which is of interest here is that Byron had an affair with his half-sister. Tis to create, and in creating live A being more intense,...gaining as we give The life we image, even as I do now (Byron l980: 80). Byron's gift is the gift of being, which is ultimately a gift to himself of that... | |
| Richard Hoggart - 380 ページ
...thrillingly on the theme. So Byron, slightly surprising, in Childe Harold's Pilgrimage, III, 6. 'Tis to create, and in creating live A being more intense...form our fancy, gaining as we give The life we image . . . That's an exceptionally packed prescription: an act of creation which makes one's own life lived... | |
| Guinn Batten - 1998 - 326 ページ
...without the other, as in these lines on his hero, Harold, inspired by thoughts of his daughter: Tis to create, and in creating live A being more intense,...I do now. What am I? Nothing: but not so art thou, Soul of my thought! with whom I traverse earth, Invisible but gazing, as I glow Mix'd with thy spirit,... | |
| Martin Middeke, Werner Huber - 1999 - 248 ページ
...workings of the creative process on the poet. Only in poetry is the formation of identity possible: 'Tis to create, and in creating live A being more intense,...With form our fancy, gaining as we give The life we imagine, even as I do now.14 In the following lines, which Polidori does not quote, Byron writes of... | |
| Thomas McFarland - 2000 - 268 ページ
...Byron memorably specifies what it is that a poet or other artist is hoping to do by his endeavour: Tis to create, and in creating live A being more intense,...I do now. What am I? Nothing; but not so art thou, Soul of my thought!1 Yet Byron does not point to what will here be seen as an inevitable accompaniment... | |
| George Wilson Knight - 2002 - 416 ページ
...insight; there follows that swerve to objectivity so necessary and natural to Byron. We continue: 'Tis to create, and in creating live A being more intense...I do now. What am I? Nothing: but not so art thou, Soul of my thought! with whom I traverse earth, Invisible but gazing, as I glow Mix'd with thy spirit,... | |
| Donald Mitchell, Andrew Nicholson - 2002 - 676 ページ
...found a surprisingly sympathetic fellow-traveller on many more counts than this — put it in 1816: Tis to create, and in creating live A being more intense,...gaining as we give The life we image, even as I do now. 7 Adorno, Mahler, 8; a term which, despite its Hegelian '' Poems, 714 and 715. ancestry, Adorno borrows... | |
| Jerome McGann - 2002 - 332 ページ
...adopts the Romantic course of trusting his own vision, his own imaginative grasp of experience: 'Tis to create, and in creating, live A being more intense,...gaining as we give The life we image, even as I do now. (Childe Harold III, st. 6) The gods summoned by this "being more intense" turn out Lucretian, however,... | |
| |