Imagination and Fancy: Or, Selections from the English Poets, Illustrative of Those First Requisites of Their Art; with Markings of the Best Passages, Critical Notices of the Writers, and an Essay in Answer to the Question, "What is Poetry?"Wiley and Putnam, 1845 - 255 páginas |
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Página viii
... nature and requirements of poetry , as may enable readers in general to give an answer on those points to themselves and others ; —and to show , throughout the greater part of the volume , what sort of poetry is to be considered as ...
... nature and requirements of poetry , as may enable readers in general to give an answer on those points to themselves and others ; —and to show , throughout the greater part of the volume , what sort of poetry is to be considered as ...
Página 1
... nature and convention , keeping alive among us the enjoyment of the external and spiritual world : it has constituted the most enduring fame of nations ; and , next to Love and Beauty , which are its parents , is the greatest proof to ...
... nature and convention , keeping alive among us the enjoyment of the external and spiritual world : it has constituted the most enduring fame of nations ; and , next to Love and Beauty , which are its parents , is the greatest proof to ...
Página 3
... as in other analogies , " the same feet of Nature , " as Bacon says , may be seen treading in different paths ; " and that the most scornful , that is to say , dullest disciple of fact , should be cautious how he WHAT IS POETRY ? 3.
... as in other analogies , " the same feet of Nature , " as Bacon says , may be seen treading in different paths ; " and that the most scornful , that is to say , dullest disciple of fact , should be cautious how he WHAT IS POETRY ? 3.
Página 5
... nature , and be thanked for the addition . There is an instance of this kind in Warner , an old Elizabethan poet ... natural fiction as distinguished from supernatural ; -Fourth , that which WHAT IS POETRY ? 5.
... nature , and be thanked for the addition . There is an instance of this kind in Warner , an old Elizabethan poet ... natural fiction as distinguished from supernatural ; -Fourth , that which WHAT IS POETRY ? 5.
Página 6
... nature ; as Homer's gods , and Shakspeare's witches , enchanted horses and spears , Ariosto's hippogriff , & c . ; -Fifth , that which , in order to illustrate or aggravate one image , introduces another ; sometimes in simile , as when ...
... nature ; as Homer's gods , and Shakspeare's witches , enchanted horses and spears , Ariosto's hippogriff , & c . ; -Fifth , that which , in order to illustrate or aggravate one image , introduces another ; sometimes in simile , as when ...
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Términos y frases comunes
auld bard Beaumont and Fletcher beauty Ben Jonson bless bonnie breath Burns's called character charm Chaucer dear death delight divine doth dream Dumfries earth Ellisland eyes Faerie Queene fair fairy fancy fear feeling felt flowers frae gauger genius hand happy hath head hear heard heart heaven Hector Macneil hour human imagination inspired knew labor lady light live look Lycidas Macbeth Mauchline melancholy Milton mind mirth moral morning Mossgiel muse nature never noble o'er passage passion perhaps pity pleasure poem poet poet's poetical poetry poor pride rhyme Robert Burns round Scotland Scottish Shakspeare Shanter sing sleep song soul Spenser spirit stanza sugh sweet Sycorax Tamburlaine tears tell thee things Thomson thou art thought tion TITANIA truth verse voice Whyles wife William Burnes wind witch wood words young youth