Lectures on the English PoetsT. Miller, 1819 - 331 páginas |
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William Hazlitt. LECTURES ON THE ENGLISH POETS . T. Miller , Printer , Noble Street , Cheapside . This day is published , Characters OF SHAKESPEAR'S PLAYS ,
William Hazlitt. LECTURES ON THE ENGLISH POETS . T. Miller , Printer , Noble Street , Cheapside . This day is published , Characters OF SHAKESPEAR'S PLAYS ,
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... COWPER . 168 LECTURE VI . ON SWIFT , YOUNG , GRAY , COLLINS , & c . • . 206 LECTURE VII . ON BURNS , AND THE OLD ENGLISH BALLADS . 245 LECTURE VIII . ON THE LIVING POETS . 283 LECTURES ON THE ENGLISH POETS . LECTURE I - INTRODUCTORY.
... COWPER . 168 LECTURE VI . ON SWIFT , YOUNG , GRAY , COLLINS , & c . • . 206 LECTURE VII . ON BURNS , AND THE OLD ENGLISH BALLADS . 245 LECTURE VIII . ON THE LIVING POETS . 283 LECTURES ON THE ENGLISH POETS . LECTURE I - INTRODUCTORY.
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William Hazlitt. LECTURES ON THE ENGLISH POETS . LECTURE I - INTRODUCTORY . ON POETRY IN GENERAL . THE best general notion which I can give of poetry is , that it is the natural impression of any object or event , by its vividness ...
William Hazlitt. LECTURES ON THE ENGLISH POETS . LECTURE I - INTRODUCTORY . ON POETRY IN GENERAL . THE best general notion which I can give of poetry is , that it is the natural impression of any object or event , by its vividness ...
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... Poets alone have not " such seething brains , such shaping fantasies , that apprehend more than cooler reason " can . " The lunatic , the lover , and the poet Are of imagination all compact . One sees more devils than vast hell can hold ...
... Poets alone have not " such seething brains , such shaping fantasies , that apprehend more than cooler reason " can . " The lunatic , the lover , and the poet Are of imagination all compact . One sees more devils than vast hell can hold ...
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... poets from his Commonwealth , lest their descriptions of the natural man should spoil his mathematical man , who was to be without passions and affections , who was neither to laugh nor weep , to feel sorrow nor anger , to be cast down ...
... poets from his Commonwealth , lest their descriptions of the natural man should spoil his mathematical man , who was to be without passions and affections , who was neither to laugh nor weep , to feel sorrow nor anger , to be cast down ...
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