Biographia Literaria, 1817, Volumen2Scolar Press, 1971 - 310 páginas |
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Página 105
... person of any taste , who had but studied three or four of Shakspeare's principal plays , would without the name affixed scarcely fail to recognize as Shakspeare's , a quotation from any other play , though but of a few lines . A ...
... person of any taste , who had but studied three or four of Shakspeare's principal plays , would without the name affixed scarcely fail to recognize as Shakspeare's , a quotation from any other play , though but of a few lines . A ...
Página 158
... person ? To form an idea of a thing's becoming nothing ; or of nothing becoming a thing ; is impossible to all finite beings alike , of whatever age , and how- ever educated or uneducated . Thus it is with splendid paradoxes in general ...
... person ? To form an idea of a thing's becoming nothing ; or of nothing becoming a thing ; is impossible to all finite beings alike , of whatever age , and how- ever educated or uneducated . Thus it is with splendid paradoxes in general ...
Página 191
... person , no man person , no woman person ever denies it . But we are all Got's children . Here the Hanoverian interrupted him , and the other Dane , the Swede , and the Prussian , joined us , together with a young Englishman who spoke ...
... person , no man person , no woman person ever denies it . But we are all Got's children . Here the Hanoverian interrupted him , and the other Dane , the Swede , and the Prussian , joined us , together with a young Englishman who spoke ...
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admiration Aldobrand ANSW appear beauty Bertram blank verse character child common composition critic Cuxhaven DANE dear friend defect delight diction drama Edinburgh Review effect Elbe English equally excellence excitement expression feelings former French genius German German language greater Greek ground guage Hamburg heart human imagery images imagination imitation instance interest judgement Klopstock lady language least less lines low and rustic Lubec Lyrical Ballads MADRIGALE Martha Ray means ment metre metrical Milton mind moral nature object odes passage passion perhaps person philosophical Pindar pleasure poem poet poet's poetic poetry present prose racter Ratzeburg reader reason rhyme S. T. COLERIDGE scene seemed sense sentences Shakespeare Sonnet soul specimens spirit stanzas style surprize sweet sympathy taste thing thou thought tion tragedy truth Venus and Adonis verse whole words Wordsworth writers