Wordsworth to TennysonH. Frowde, Oxford University Press, 1913 |
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Página 6
... verse , which closes for us with Tennyson . His famous brethren in song , more or less unconsciously , even mocking Byron , underwent his influence , while they vaunted their independence . The later poetry of the nineteenth century has ...
... verse , which closes for us with Tennyson . His famous brethren in song , more or less unconsciously , even mocking Byron , underwent his influence , while they vaunted their independence . The later poetry of the nineteenth century has ...
Página 7
... verse has ceased to please . That is the common fate of poetry in bulk . It must be conceded that the rule applies especi- ally here . Ordinary readers even with a taste for poetry are satisfied with a fraction of his . As it happens ...
... verse has ceased to please . That is the common fate of poetry in bulk . It must be conceded that the rule applies especi- ally here . Ordinary readers even with a taste for poetry are satisfied with a fraction of his . As it happens ...
Página 8
... verse . Let us delight ourselves with its charm , wherever we find it - not quarrelling with the sweetness because the honeycomb may be hidden among the bones of a dead lion of thought . To take offence at Wordsworth because the ...
... verse . Let us delight ourselves with its charm , wherever we find it - not quarrelling with the sweetness because the honeycomb may be hidden among the bones of a dead lion of thought . To take offence at Wordsworth because the ...
Página 18
... Verse may build a princely throne On humble truth ; 18 for the plough - boy's merry whoop ; and for the stately Beggar - woman : a creature Beautiful to see — a weed of glorious feature ! 19 for the proofs of humanity's ability to rise ...
... Verse may build a princely throne On humble truth ; 18 for the plough - boy's merry whoop ; and for the stately Beggar - woman : a creature Beautiful to see — a weed of glorious feature ! 19 for the proofs of humanity's ability to rise ...
Página 19
... verse . He mixed so much of his self - communings , the conviction of his obliga- tion to rebuke , reform , and teach , that the Poet often was lost to view in the Preacher . Is it too much to assume that to it also , to the absolute ...
... verse . He mixed so much of his self - communings , the conviction of his obliga- tion to rebuke , reform , and teach , that the Poet often was lost to view in the Preacher . Is it too much to assume that to it also , to the absolute ...
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Palavras e frases frequentes
admirable angels Annabel Lee Arthur Hugh Clough Ballads beauty born breast breath bright Canto charm Christabel Christopher Smart cloud cold Coleridge Coventry Patmore Dante Gabriel Rossetti dark dead death delight divine doth Dramatic Lyrics dream earth English eyes fair fancy fear feel fire flowers glory golden grave hath hear heard heart Heaven hymn Ibid imagination inspiration Keats Kilmeny King kiss Lady land Leigh Hunt less light live Lord Martyr of Antioch Matthew Arnold melody mighty Minstrelsy mother Muse nature never night Nightingale o'er Omar Khayyám once passion pathos Poems poet poet's poetic poetry readers rose round Rubáiyát Santa Maura shadow Shelley silent sing sleep song Sonnets sorrow soul sound spirit stanzas star sweet tears tender Tennyson thee thine thou thought Twas verse voice wandering wild wind Wordsworth writer