Lectures on the English PoetsDent, 1908 - 327 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 37
Página 13
... language of the imagination and the passions , of fancy and will . Nothing , therefore , can be more absurd than the outcry which has been sometimes raised by frigid and pedantic critics , for re- ducing the language of poetry to the ...
... language of the imagination and the passions , of fancy and will . Nothing , therefore , can be more absurd than the outcry which has been sometimes raised by frigid and pedantic critics , for re- ducing the language of poetry to the ...
Página 20
... 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 short ...
... 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 short ...
Página 65
... 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 ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
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