Browning, Poet and Man: A SurveyG.P. Putnam's sons, 1899 - 282 páginas |
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Página 35
... true poet placed in such an environment might develop . The narrative , not the dramatic , form is chosen for the poem , apparently with the idea of ap- peasing the critics . In the opening lines the poet deprecates the necessity of ...
... true poet placed in such an environment might develop . The narrative , not the dramatic , form is chosen for the poem , apparently with the idea of ap- peasing the critics . In the opening lines the poet deprecates the necessity of ...
Página 257
... true domain , any more than the theatre in which he multiplied his fruitless attempts , to which he brought too much individual psychology and too many moral analyses . He was moved to revive the men of the past , not to set them in ...
... true domain , any more than the theatre in which he multiplied his fruitless attempts , to which he brought too much individual psychology and too many moral analyses . He was moved to revive the men of the past , not to set them in ...
Página 270
... true that this appears to be the rock on which these institutions founder in their voyage toward public respect . There is a certain excuse for treating Browning in the way that Mr. Morgan approves when Shake- speare is in question ...
... true that this appears to be the rock on which these institutions founder in their voyage toward public respect . There is a certain excuse for treating Browning in the way that Mr. Morgan approves when Shake- speare is in question ...
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Abt Vogler admirable Æschylus Anael Andrea Andrea del Sarto artist Asolo beauty Berdoe Browning Society Browning wrote Browning's called Camberwell century certainly character Charles Avison charm critic death divine Djabal drama Druses emotion English expression eyes fact faculty father feeling Fifine friends fugue genius give heart honour human idea imagination impression impulse ing's inspired intellectual intelligence interesting Italian Italy J. W. Alexander less letters literary living marriage Master Hugues ment Milsand mind Miss Barrett moral nature ness never once orchestrion painters painting Paracelsus passion Pauline perhaps picture Pippa Pippa Passes play poem poet poet's poetic poetry pure qualities reader recognised rhyme Ring Robert Browning says seems sentiment Shelley Sordello soul spirit Strafford style sympathy temperament Tennyson thing thought tion touched truth verse wife words writing written