Lectures on the English PoetsDent, 1908 - 327 páginas |
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Página 96
... expression , or of an adaptation of the sound and movement of the verse to the meaning of the passage , than in all our other writers , whether of rhyme or blank verse , put together ( with the exception already mentioned ) . Spenser is ...
... expression , or of an adaptation of the sound and movement of the verse to the meaning of the passage , than in all our other writers , whether of rhyme or blank verse , put together ( with the exception already mentioned ) . Spenser is ...
Página 134
... expression ; but if the expression did not come of itself , he left the whole business to chance ; or , willing to evade , instead of encountering , the difficulties of his subject , fills up the intervals of true inspirat- ion with the ...
... expression ; but if the expression did not come of itself , he left the whole business to chance ; or , willing to evade , instead of encountering , the difficulties of his subject , fills up the intervals of true inspirat- ion with the ...
Página 232
... expression in proportion as there is little to express , and the decomposition of prose is substituted for the composition of poetry . How much the sense and keeping in the ideas are sacrificed to a jingle of words and epigrammatic turn ...
... expression in proportion as there is little to express , and the decomposition of prose is substituted for the composition of poetry . How much the sense and keeping in the ideas are sacrificed to a jingle of words and epigrammatic turn ...
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Términos y frases comunes
admiration affectation artificial Ballads beauty Beggar's Opera blank verse Boccaccio character Chaucer circumstances common critic death delight describes Dr Johnson dramatic epic poetry equal excellence Faery Queen fame fancy feeling flowers forms genius give grace hand happy hates hath heart Heaven hire human ical idea images imagination instance interest Knight's Tale labour language less lines living look Lord Byron Lordship Lycidas Lyrical Ballads manners Milton mind moral Muse nature never o'er objects painted Paradise Lost passion pathos perhaps persons pleasure poem poet poetical poetry Pope Pope's praise prose reader rhyme seem'd sense sentiment Shakespeare Shanter sing song soul sound Spenser spirit spring story style sublime sweet thee things thou thought tree truth verse wind wings words Wordsworth writer youth