Imagination and Fancy : Or, Selections from the English Poets: Illustrative of Those First Requisites of Their Art ; with Markings of the Best Passages, Critical Notices of the Writers, and an Essay in Answer to the Question "What is Poetry?"G.P. Putnam, 1852 - 255 páginas |
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Página viii
... pleasure of the reader , his companion ; just as in reading out - loud , one instinctively increases one's em- phasis here and there , and implies a certain accordance of enjoyment on the part of the hearers . In short , all poetic ...
... pleasure of the reader , his companion ; just as in reading out - loud , one instinctively increases one's em- phasis here and there , and implies a certain accordance of enjoyment on the part of the hearers . In short , all poetic ...
Página 1
... pleasure and exaltation . Poetry stands between nature and convention , keeping alive among us the enjoyment of the external and spiritual world : it has constituted the most enduring fame of nations ; and , next to Love and Beauty ...
... pleasure and exaltation . Poetry stands between nature and convention , keeping alive among us the enjoyment of the external and spiritual world : it has constituted the most enduring fame of nations ; and , next to Love and Beauty ...
Página 3
... pleasure . Inquiring of a gardener , for in- stance , what flower it is that we see yonder , he answers , lily . " This is matter of fact . The botanist pronounces it to be of the order of " Hexandria Monogynia . " This is matter of ...
... pleasure . Inquiring of a gardener , for in- stance , what flower it is that we see yonder , he answers , lily . " This is matter of fact . The botanist pronounces it to be of the order of " Hexandria Monogynia . " This is matter of ...
Página 5
... pleasure , or at the very worst , a balm in our tears , is drawn out of pain . It is a great and rare thing , and shows a lovely imagination , when the poet can write a commentary , as it were , of his own , on such sufficing passages ...
... pleasure , or at the very worst , a balm in our tears , is drawn out of pain . It is a great and rare thing , and shows a lovely imagination , when the poet can write a commentary , as it were , of his own , on such sufficing passages ...
Página 21
... pleasure ; and having just enough hold of analogy to betray it into the hands of its smiling subjector . Silent icicles Quietly shining to the quiet moon . Coleridge's Frost at Midnight . That , again , is imagination ; —analogical ...
... pleasure ; and having just enough hold of analogy to betray it into the hands of its smiling subjector . Silent icicles Quietly shining to the quiet moon . Coleridge's Frost at Midnight . That , again , is imagination ; —analogical ...
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Términos y frases comunes
Agnes alliteration angels Archimago Ariel Beaumont Beaumont and Fletcher beauty Ben Jonson breath Caliban charm Chaucer Christabel Coleridge Correggio dance Dante delight Demogorgon divine doth dreadful dream earth enchanted exquisite eyes Faerie Faerie Queene fair fairy fancy feeling fire flowers genius gentle golden goodly grace hast hath head hear heard heart heaven Hecate imagination lady light live look lord Lycidas Macbeth Mammon melancholy Milton moon Morpheus mortal nature never night o'er OBERON pain painted Painter passage passion play poem poet poetical poetry Porphyro pray Priam Proserpina queen reader rhyme round satyrs sense Shakspeare sing sleep soft song soul sound Spenser spirit sprite stanza sweet Sycorax Tamburlaine tears thee Theoph thine things thou art thought TITANIA tree truth unto verse versification wanton wind wings witch wood word writing young δε