John Clare and Other StudiesP. Nevill, 1950 - 252 páginas |
No interior do livro
Resultados 1-3 de 18
Página 76
... beginning , devote his life to poetry , to expressing through the medium of poetry the thought that is born of a lifetime's full experience , is become almost fantastic . The position of Spenser , the great teacher of English poets , is ...
... beginning , devote his life to poetry , to expressing through the medium of poetry the thought that is born of a lifetime's full experience , is become almost fantastic . The position of Spenser , the great teacher of English poets , is ...
Página 134
... beginning of their share of it ; but they can more keenly feel its complexity and its wonder ; they can attain to an eminence from which they contemplate it calmly and undismayed . The great writers do this , and convey the issue of ...
... beginning of their share of it ; but they can more keenly feel its complexity and its wonder ; they can attain to an eminence from which they contemplate it calmly and undismayed . The great writers do this , and convey the issue of ...
Página 222
... beginning and the middle and the end of Coriolanus . The hero is not a human being at all . ' Mr Bernard Shaw , on the other hands , puts Coriolanus with Faulconbridge as ' admirable descriptions of instinctive temperaments , ' and says ...
... beginning and the middle and the end of Coriolanus . The hero is not a human being at all . ' Mr Bernard Shaw , on the other hands , puts Coriolanus with Faulconbridge as ' admirable descriptions of instinctive temperaments , ' and says ...
Índice
THE POETRY OF JOHN CLARE | 7 |
THE CASE OF JOHN CLARE | 19 |
THE MADNESS OF CHRISTOPHER SMART | 25 |
Direitos de autor | |
16 outras secções não apresentadas
Outras edições - Ver tudo
Palavras e frases frequentes
achievement Amiel appears artist attitude Aufidius Baudelaire Baudelaire's beauty believe Billy Budd Bouvard et Pécuchet Bovary c'est character Charles Lamb cœur comedy comic consciousness Coriolanus Coriolanus's creative criticism death dedication deliberate Dostoevsky dream Edmund Blunden emotion English English poetry eyes fact Falstaff Fanny Kelly fear feel Flaubert genius give Gogol's Guermantes heart Henry Henry IV hero honour human ideal imagery imagination instinctive John Clare Keats knew Lamb literary literature live Madame Bovary meaning Menenius merely metaphor mind moral mortal Moone mysterious nature never passion perception perfect perhaps phrase play poem poet poet's poetic poetry precisely Proust qu'il Queen reality romantic scene seems sense sensibility Shakespeare silence simile sonnets soul Spenser spirit Stendhal story strange Swann Tchekhov thee thing thou thought true truly truth Venus and Adonis Virgilia vision Volumnia whole word Wordsworth writer wrote