Poems: The 1645 EdHarcourt, Brace, 1951 - 353 páginas |
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Página 166
... nature . It is the task of the Genius to tend the wood . The nymphs are in a certain sense personifications of the forces of nature . They are called " the breathing Roses of the Wood . " ( The Genius's description of his care of the ...
... nature . It is the task of the Genius to tend the wood . The nymphs are in a certain sense personifications of the forces of nature . They are called " the breathing Roses of the Wood . " ( The Genius's description of his care of the ...
Página 175
... nature of any special sanctity and the poet of any supernatural function . The last statement may seem to read too much into the passage in question ; and yet this is the general meaning up to which the whole of verse paragraph four ...
... nature of any special sanctity and the poet of any supernatural function . The last statement may seem to read too much into the passage in question ; and yet this is the general meaning up to which the whole of verse paragraph four ...
Página 176
... nature itself ; the death is not a loss to nature , but a numbing of the poet's sensitivity to nature . What has happened to the ear is particularized quite explicitly : it is the same sort of thing that happens to the sheep when the ...
... nature itself ; the death is not a loss to nature , but a numbing of the poet's sensitivity to nature . What has happened to the ear is particularized quite explicitly : it is the same sort of thing that happens to the sheep when the ...
Contenido
The Passion | 15 |
Sonnet II Donna leggiadra | 38 |
Comus | 55 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 34 secciones no mostradas
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Términos y frases comunes
aesthetic distance allegory Angel Apollo appear Arcades Arethuse argument beauty C. S. Lewis character charm Chastity Christ Christian classical Comus Comus's conventional course Cupid and Psyche Dæmons dance dark death deity divine doctrine doth dramatic earth edition Elder Brother English essay evil eyes fair fantasticks figure goddess gods Grace Greek Hanford harmony hast hath Heav'n Hymn Il Penseroso imagery John Milton Jove kind L'Allegro Lady Lady's light lines Lord Lycidas meaning ment metaphor morning Muses Nativity nature Neo-Platonic night nymphs o're Orpheus pagan Paradise Lost passage pastoral pastoral poetry Penseroso perhaps Phoebus phrase Platonic poem poet poet's poetic poetry praise PSAL reader reference Satan scene sense shepherds simply sing Sirens song sonnet soul speech Spenser Spirit stanza stars suggested Swain sweet symbol tear thee theme thou tion tradition Trinity College verse Virgin Virtue vision wood word