A Memoir of the Life and Writings of the Late William Taylor of Norwich ...J. Murray, 1843 |
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Seite iii
... rendered it the guide of intellect and the ruler of opinion . To show the working of these impulses , to do justice to his philological studies , and to display the varied erudition and bright conceptions with which for many years he ...
... rendered it the guide of intellect and the ruler of opinion . To show the working of these impulses , to do justice to his philological studies , and to display the varied erudition and bright conceptions with which for many years he ...
Seite 3
... rendered , had a larger portion of William Taylor's own letters been recoverable . To the few among his friends who have forwarded such contributions his biographer is eminently indebted ; but most especially to Robert Southey , Esq ...
... rendered , had a larger portion of William Taylor's own letters been recoverable . To the few among his friends who have forwarded such contributions his biographer is eminently indebted ; but most especially to Robert Southey , Esq ...
Seite 15
... rendered conducive to the widest diffusion and keenest enjoyment of practical good . The first faint gleams of the excitement produced by this train of sensations may be discerned in his descriptions of some of the more striking scenes ...
... rendered conducive to the widest diffusion and keenest enjoyment of practical good . The first faint gleams of the excitement produced by this train of sensations may be discerned in his descriptions of some of the more striking scenes ...
Seite 27
... rendered study honourable , he nettled at the same time the national pride , and awakened a general desire to prove that the stig- ma which he had cast upon the country of his birth was undeserved and unjust . Men of ster- ling talent ...
... rendered study honourable , he nettled at the same time the national pride , and awakened a general desire to prove that the stig- ma which he had cast upon the country of his birth was undeserved and unjust . Men of ster- ling talent ...
Seite 31
... , to the joy of being reunited to a son , who cannot fail to render you the happiest of parents . Most earnestly do I wish that my pu- pils may imitate the excellent example which his conduct has SOJOURN IN GERMANY . 31.
... , to the joy of being reunited to a son , who cannot fail to render you the happiest of parents . Most earnestly do I wish that my pu- pils may imitate the excellent example which his conduct has SOJOURN IN GERMANY . 31.
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66 My dear Abbé Barruel admiration Aikin alterations amuse Anthology Arthur Aikin ballad Barruel beautiful blank verse bless Bluebeard Bristol Bürger Burnett character Coleridge Critical dear Friend Dear Sir Detmold eclogue Edinburgh English favour feel France French German Goethe Griffiths Henry hexameters hope interest Iris judgement Keswick Klopstock labour language leisure Lenore letter Lisbon literary literature London Mackintosh Madoc ment metre mind Monthly Magazine Monthly Review never Norwich opinion original paper Paris passages perhaps poem poet poetical poetry praise printed probably racter rendered Robert Southey Sayers society soon Southey to William spirit spondee stanzas story style talents taste Taylor to Robert Thalaba thought tion translation Turnham Green verse volume Wernigerode whole Wieland William Taylor wish word write written Yarmouth
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 92 - Tramp! tramp! along the land they rode, Splash! splash! along the sea; The scourge is red, the spur drops blood, The flashing pebbles flee, 'Hurrah! hurrah! well ride the dead; The bride, the bride, is come; And soon we reach the bridal bed, For, Helen, here's my home...
Seite 155 - O thou that rollest above, round as the shield of my fathers! Whence are thy beams, O sun! thy everlasting light? Thou comest forth, in thy awful beauty; the stars hide themselves in the sky; the moon, cold and pale, sinks in the western wave. But thou thyself movest alone: who can be a companion of thy course!
Seite 370 - That, changed through all, and yet in all the same; Great in the earth, as in the ethereal frame; Warms in the sun, refreshes in the breeze, Glows in the stars, and blossoms in the trees; Lives through all life, extends through all extent; Spreads undivided, operates unspent!
Seite 370 - Great in the earth as in the ethereal frame, Warms in the sun, refreshes in the breeze, Glows in the stars, and blossoms in the trees : Lives through all life, extends through all extent, Spreads undivided, operates unspent...
Seite 451 - I am grieved that you never met Coleridge ; all other men whom I have ever known are mere children to him, and yet all is palsied by a total want of moral strength.
Seite 316 - Burger is one of those authors whose book I like to have in my hand, but when I have laid the book down I do not think about him. I remember a hurry of pleasure, but J have few distinct forms that people my mind, nor any recollection of delicate or minute feelings which he has either communicated to me, or taught me to recognise.
Seite 219 - is, I think, the clumsiest attempt at German sublimity I ever saw.
Seite 458 - Coleridge and I have often talked of making a great work upon English literature : but Coleridge only talks, and, poor fellow ! he will not do that long, I fear ; and then I shall begin, in my turn, to feel an old man, — to talk of the age of little men, and complain like Ossian. It provokes me when I hear a set of puppies yelping at him, upon whom he, a great good-natured mastiff, if he came up to them, would just lift up his leg and pass on. It vexes and grieves me to the heart, that when he...
Seite 449 - Trissino' to cure my poetry of its wheyishness ; let me prescribe the 'Vulgar Errors' of Sir Thomas Browne to you for a like remedy. You taught me to write English by what you said about Burger's language and from what I felt from your translations, — one of the eras of my intellectual history ; would that I could now in my turn impress you with the same convictions ! Crowd your ideas as you will, your images can never be too many ; give them the stamp and autograph of William...
Seite 292 - ... those of uncertain value be afterwards concentrated, rendered stimulant by withdrawing the water of deliquescence, be alcoholized, and have their aroma distilled into a quintessential drop of otr. If there be a poetical sin in which you are apt to indulge, it is expatiation, an Odyssey garrulity, as if you were ambitious of exhausting a topic, instead of selecting its more impressive outlines only. In a metrical romance this is probably no evil — some feeble intervals increase the effect of...