Lectures on Poetry and General Literature: Delivered at the Royal Institution in 1830 and 1831Longman, Rees, Orme, Browne, Green, & Longman, 1833 - 394 páginas |
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Página 58
... touching is the thought ! —the stars , the unchanging ' stars , appear to us with the same placid magnificence as they were seen by the Redeemer of the world , when , " having sent the multitude away , he went up into a mountain apart ...
... touching is the thought ! —the stars , the unchanging ' stars , appear to us with the same placid magnificence as they were seen by the Redeemer of the world , when , " having sent the multitude away , he went up into a mountain apart ...
Página 63
... touching " the lyre of Heaven , " ( to borrow the happy figure of a living poet , in reference to the discovery of the planet Herschel , ) there is yet another note a key - note , which , with its chords , embodies the harmonies of all ...
... touching " the lyre of Heaven , " ( to borrow the happy figure of a living poet , in reference to the discovery of the planet Herschel , ) there is yet another note a key - note , which , with its chords , embodies the harmonies of all ...
Página 69
... eyes suddenly touch a palpable substance . Yet not into itself alone , or even within the cir- cumscribed horizon of the present , does the mind retire from eternity ; it takes refuge in past time NO . II . 69 WHAT IS POETICAL .
... eyes suddenly touch a palpable substance . Yet not into itself alone , or even within the cir- cumscribed horizon of the present , does the mind retire from eternity ; it takes refuge in past time NO . II . 69 WHAT IS POETICAL .
Página 94
... touch , so exquisitely fine , Feels at each thread , and lives along the line ; " Essay on Man . whereas the ear can only connect the successive sounds as they are pronounced , with those that are gone by , which are often imperfectly ...
... touch , so exquisitely fine , Feels at each thread , and lives along the line ; " Essay on Man . whereas the ear can only connect the successive sounds as they are pronounced , with those that are gone by , which are often imperfectly ...
Página 97
... defective , that the most perfect tact of verbal criticism is but like the fine touch of the blind man , whereby he ascertains the F forms of substances submitted to it , while there is NO . III . 97 THE FORM OF POETRY .
... defective , that the most perfect tact of verbal criticism is but like the fine touch of the blind man , whereby he ascertains the F forms of substances submitted to it , while there is NO . III . 97 THE FORM OF POETRY .
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Lectures on Poetry and General Literature, Delivered at the Royal ... James Montgomery Prévia não disponível - 2015 |
Termos e frases comuns
admiration Æneid affections amidst ancient beauty blank verse cadence character circumstances colour composition contemporaries death delight diction Dryden earth Egyptians eloquence employed English equally excellence exquisite Faerie Queene fancy feel genius glory Greece Greek hand harmony heart heaven Henry Kirke White hieroglyphics Homer honour human ideas Iliad images imagination invention Joanna Baillie kind labours Lamech language latter learning less lines literature living Lord Lord Byron ment metre Milton mind modern moral nations nature never once original painting Paradise Lost passage passions peculiar perfect perpetual Pisistratus pleonasm poem poet poetical poetry present prose reader rhyme Robert Burns ROBERT SOUTHEY Roman Saracens scarcely scene sculpture sentiments song soul sound Spenserian stanza spirit splendour stanzas stars strains style sublime syllables taste thee theme things thou thought tion tongue truth uttered verse Virgil whole words writing