Lectures on the English PoetsH. Milford, Oxford University Press, 1924 - 256 páginas |
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Página 19
... language , to make the sound an echo to the sense , when the sense becomes a sort of echo to itself — to mingle the tide of verse , ' the golden cadences of poetry ' , with the tide of feeling , flowing and murmuring as it flows - in ...
... language , to make the sound an echo to the sense , when the sense becomes a sort of echo to itself — to mingle the tide of verse , ' the golden cadences of poetry ' , with the tide of feeling , flowing and murmuring as it flows - in ...
Página 64
... language . This stanza , with alternate and repeatedly recurring rhymes , is borrowed from the Italians . It was peculiarly fitted to their language , which abounds in similar vowel terminations , and is as little adapted to ours , from ...
... language . This stanza , with alternate and repeatedly recurring rhymes , is borrowed from the Italians . It was peculiarly fitted to their language , which abounds in similar vowel terminations , and is as little adapted to ours , from ...
Página 83
... language , which flowed from the warmth and originality of his imagination , and were his own . The language used for prose conversation and ordinary business is sometimes technical , and involved in the affecta- tion of the time ...
... language , which flowed from the warmth and originality of his imagination , and were his own . The language used for prose conversation and ordinary business is sometimes technical , and involved in the affecta- tion of the time ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Lectures on the English Poets: Delivered at the Surrey Institution William Hazlitt Vista completa - 1818 |
Lectures on the English Poets: Delivered at the Surrey Institution William Hazlitt Vista completa - 1818 |
Términos y frases comunes
admirable affectation allegory appear Ballads beauty Beggar's Opera blank verse Boccaccio Bonamy Dobrée character Chaucer Cutty Sark death delight describes doth Dryden English equal Essays excellence Faery Queen fame fancy feeling finest flowers genius give Gonne grace happy hates hath heart Heaven Herbert Croft hire Homer human idea images imagination interest Introduction Knight's Tale labour language Lewis Campbell lines living look Lord Lord Byron Lyrical Ballads manners Milton mind moral Muse nature never night o'er objects painting Paradise Lost passion pathos persons play pleasure poem poet poetical poetry Pope praise prose reader rhyme satire sense sentiment Shakespeare song soul sound Spenser spirit spring story style sweet ther things thou thought tion Titian Translated tree truth verse Whan wings wolde words Wordsworth writer wyllowe-tree youth