| Walter Jackson Bate - 2009 - 784 páginas
..."traverse each other in Numberless points, and at last greet each other at the Journey's end"; that "Man should not dispute or assert but whisper results to his neighbour." If such observations could have been partly prompted by the contrast of Wordsworth's example, they... | |
| John Dewey - 1993 - 276 páginas
...Citadel" like the web the spider spins, "filling the air with a beautiful circuiting." For, he says, "man should not dispute or assert, but whisper results...spirit sucking the sap from mould ethereal, every human being might become great, and Humanity instead of being a wide heath of Furze and Briars with here... | |
| Andrés Rodríguez - 1993 - 244 páginas
...something real in the World," Keats says to Reynolds in the manner he had proposed to him earlier: "Man should not dispute or assert but whisper results to his neighbour" (February 19, 1818). "The truth is there is something real in the World Your Third Chamber of Life... | |
| Stuart M. Sperry - 1994 - 376 páginas
..."the Benefit done by great Works to the 'Spirit and pulse of good' by their mere passive existence." "Man should not dispute or assert but whisper results to his neighbour," he adds, "and thus by every germ of Spirit sucking the Sap from mould ethereal every human might become... | |
| Willard Spiegelman - 1995 - 234 páginas
...contact "at the Journeys end." Such soul-making has an organic basis and a political consequence: "[TJhus by every germ of Spirit sucking the Sap from mould...or Pine, would become a grand democracy of Forest Trees."23 From reading to soul-making Keats moves on to a peculiar reconstruction of Acts 20:35: [W]e... | |
| John Keats, Robert Gittings - 1995 - 324 páginas
...a child 35 would talk together and the old Man be led on his Path, and the child left thinking — Man should not dispute or assert but whisper results...Spirit sucking the Sap from mould ethereal every human being might become great, and Humanity instead of being a wide heath of Furse and 40 Briars with here... | |
| Roland Hagenbüchle, Hans Hunfeld - 1997 - 196 páginas
...Funktion der durch die Lektüre ausgelösten Phantasietätigkeit wird von Keats deutlich hervorgehoben. Man should not dispute or assert but whisper results to his neighbour, and thus by every geim of Spirit sucking the Sap from mould ethereal every human might become great, and Humanity instead... | |
| Richard Kraut - 2002 - 540 páginas
...Man and a child would talk together and the old Man be led on his Path and the child left thinking. Man should not dispute or assert but whisper results to his neighbour and thns by every germ of Spirit sucking the Sap from mould ethereal every hnman might become great, and... | |
| Northrop Frye - 2005 - 465 páginas
...also is hidden "within." Keats refers to this hidden society when he says in a letter to Reynolds, "Man should not dispute or assert but whisper results to his neighbour . . . and Humanity . . . would become a grand democracy of Forest Trees!"15 Coleridge refers to it in the Biographia... | |
| 1901 - 670 páginas
...and a child would talk together, and the old man be led on his path and the child left thinking. " Man should not dispute or assert, but whisper results to his neighbour," he affirms ; " let us open our leaves like a flower, and be passive and receptive, budding patiently... | |
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