The Discovery of PoetryE. Arnold, 1930 - 220 páginas |
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Página 9
... interest you , can thrill you . But there are feelings nobler than interest or excitement , feelings which come to all whose souls are awake when they read of the death of Mallory and Irvine upon Everest , or of Captain Scott at the ...
... interest you , can thrill you . But there are feelings nobler than interest or excitement , feelings which come to all whose souls are awake when they read of the death of Mallory and Irvine upon Everest , or of Captain Scott at the ...
Página 106
... interest . Chaucer definitely concentrates on men and women , though he has occasional attractive natural descriptions . Spenser paints some beautiful pictures of scenery , but they remain pictures ; to him , as to Chaucer , the forests ...
... interest . Chaucer definitely concentrates on men and women , though he has occasional attractive natural descriptions . Spenser paints some beautiful pictures of scenery , but they remain pictures ; to him , as to Chaucer , the forests ...
Página 109
... interest Unborrowed from the eye . What the boy Wordsworth felt intensely and contin- ually , none of us has failed to feel however faintly , however intermittently . But with the growth of in- dustrialism and the spread of towns , with ...
... interest Unborrowed from the eye . What the boy Wordsworth felt intensely and contin- ually , none of us has failed to feel however faintly , however intermittently . But with the growth of in- dustrialism and the spread of towns , with ...
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Términos y frases comunes
alliteration already anapaests ballad beauty birds blank verse bring century chapter Christ receive thy Collected Poems consider daffodils death drama Edward emotion English poetry express eyes flowers folk-song give Hamlet hear heard heart Humbert Wolfe imagination inspiration instance Keats king labour Laurence Binyon lines live look lover lyric meaning metaphor metre mind mither narrative nature never night nonny once pass passage passion perhaps phrase play poet poet's poetic prose quoted Ralph Hodgson receive thy saule rhyme rhythm Robert Bridges scene sense Shakespeare Shelley simile simple sing Sir Patrick Spens song sonnet sound speech spirit spring stanza stars story sung sweet syllables tell thee things Thomas Hardy thou thought to-day tune vivid voyage W. H. Davies W. J. Turner W. W. Gibson wind words Wordsworth writing written