Repetitions in Keats' Writing: Their Significance to an Understanding of His Mental ProcessesUniversity of Wisconsin--Madison, 1936 - 528 páginas |
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Página 5
... friends and poets whom he knew best . But he would have explained this as he later did what Reynolds , evidently , had called a similarity to Hunt in the first preface to Endymion . " If there is , ( any resemblance ) it is my natural ...
... friends and poets whom he knew best . But he would have explained this as he later did what Reynolds , evidently , had called a similarity to Hunt in the first preface to Endymion . " If there is , ( any resemblance ) it is my natural ...
Página 11
... friends and their misunder- standing of his attitudes and intentions gradually opened his eyes to their limitations . The reaction to Endymion at once crystallized and widened Keats ' disappointment in men . The letters give ample proof ...
... friends and their misunder- standing of his attitudes and intentions gradually opened his eyes to their limitations . The reaction to Endymion at once crystallized and widened Keats ' disappointment in men . The letters give ample proof ...
Página 240
... friends , His friends , Bailey and Clarke , bear witness to the way in which he fastened upon particular phrases that he came across in his reading . There are the lines from Shakespeare which he quotes in a letter as some passages that ...
... friends , His friends , Bailey and Clarke , bear witness to the way in which he fastened upon particular phrases that he came across in his reading . There are the lines from Shakespeare which he quotes in a letter as some passages that ...
Términos y frases comunes
achievement Agnes ambition Ambleside Apollo associated attitude Bailey Bailey's Beadsman beauty Benjamin Robert Haydon calls chapter characteristic comfort complete delight dream Endymion Eve of St evident expression eyes fame Fancy Fanny Brawne feel fever friends genius George and Georgiana Georgiana Keats goddess happiness heart Heaven Hyperion Ibid idea imagery imaginative mind immortal Indian maid intensity of sensation John Hamilton Reynolds John Keats John Taylor Keats felt Keats wrote kind knowledge Lamia Letters little hill look Lycius means mind's silent Moneta's mood moreover mortal nature Negative Capability never Nightingale Ode on Melancholy passage pattern phrase poem poet poet's Poetical reason reference repetition Saturn and Thea seems Shakespeare sight similar Sleep and Poetry song sonnet sorrow soul spirit stanza stood tip-toe sudden suffering suggested sweet taste thee things Thomas Keats thou thought truth vision waterfall wine wings Wordsworth write written