Lectures on the English PoetsRussell & Russell, 1968 - 407 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 69
Página 175
... genius and peculiar habits of mind prompted him to treat of . The Task has fewer blemishes than the Seasons ; but it has not the same capital excellence , the " unbought grace " of poetry , the power of moving and infusing the warmth of ...
... genius and peculiar habits of mind prompted him to treat of . The Task has fewer blemishes than the Seasons ; but it has not the same capital excellence , the " unbought grace " of poetry , the power of moving and infusing the warmth of ...
Página 184
... genius alone , without education , in modern and more artificial periods , the same bold and independent results as in former periods . And one reason appears to be that , though such persons , from whom we might at first expect a ...
... genius alone , without education , in modern and more artificial periods , the same bold and independent results as in former periods . And one reason appears to be that , though such persons , from whom we might at first expect a ...
Página 253
... genius , and that a man of genius is not a machine ; that they live in a state of intellectual intoxication , and that it is too much to expect them to be distinguished by peculiar sang froid , circumspection , and sobriety . Poets are ...
... genius , and that a man of genius is not a machine ; that they live in a state of intellectual intoxication , and that it is too much to expect them to be distinguished by peculiar sang froid , circumspection , and sobriety . Poets are ...
Contenido
LECTURE | 1 |
LECTURE II | 38 |
ON SHAKSPEARE AND MILTON | 82 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 5 secciones no mostradas
Términos y frases comunes
admiration affectation appear artificial beauty better character circumstances comes common critic death delight describes equal excellence expression face fancy feeling flowers force forms genius give given hand happy head heart highest hire hope human idea images imagination instance interest kind language leaves less light lines living look Lord Byron manners mean Milton mind moral Muse nature never objects once original painted pass passion perfect perhaps person play pleasure poem poet poetical poetry Pope present produced reader reason respect round seems sense sentiment Shakspeare soul sound speak Spenser spirit spring story style sweet tell thing thou thought tion tree true truth turn verse whole wind wish write