John Clare and Other StudiesP. Nevill, 1950 - 252 páginas |
No interior do livro
Resultados 1-3 de 31
Página 127
... least by the wholly peculiar persistence with which he seems to avoid all classification . He makes a queer final impression - how delighted he would have been to read it ! -as of a miniature , desiccated Shakespeare , and , indeed ...
... least by the wholly peculiar persistence with which he seems to avoid all classification . He makes a queer final impression - how delighted he would have been to read it ! -as of a miniature , desiccated Shakespeare , and , indeed ...
Página 164
... least important , the least relevant , and , to the unbiased reader , the least noticeable of its qualities . It is easy for any poetaster to be perverse ; it is extremely difficult for a poet to be perverse in Baudelaire's way . For ...
... least important , the least relevant , and , to the unbiased reader , the least noticeable of its qualities . It is easy for any poetaster to be perverse ; it is extremely difficult for a poet to be perverse in Baudelaire's way . For ...
Página 232
... least as often in a spirit perhaps best described as one of slight impatience with poetry . This is , however , not the occasion to catalogue the things they have done which they ought not to have done ; but only to try to show that ...
... least as often in a spirit perhaps best described as one of slight impatience with poetry . This is , however , not the occasion to catalogue the things they have done which they ought not to have done ; but only to try to show that ...
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