Reason & Imagination: A Study of Form and Meaning in Four PoemsUniversity of Hull, 1960 - 143 Seiten |
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... gives most pleasure when only generally and not perfectly understood ' has been completely misunderstood . The whole sentence of which it forms a part runs like this : ' When no criticism is pretended to , and the Mind in its simplicity ...
... gives most pleasure when only generally and not perfectly understood ' has been completely misunderstood . The whole sentence of which it forms a part runs like this : ' When no criticism is pretended to , and the Mind in its simplicity ...
Seite 44
... gives to his own question : Ay me , I fondly dream ! Had ye bin there - for what could that have don ? It is the answer and not the question that gives one the feeling of moving outside the well - worn grooves of conventional elegy and ...
... gives to his own question : Ay me , I fondly dream ! Had ye bin there - for what could that have don ? It is the answer and not the question that gives one the feeling of moving outside the well - worn grooves of conventional elegy and ...
Seite 48
... gives him to write not only of his grief but of his hopes and ambitions . Once more the pastoral form sym- bolizes a poetic idiom which Milton has decided to abandon . Throughout the poem there runs as a refrain a line used to introduce ...
... gives him to write not only of his grief but of his hopes and ambitions . Once more the pastoral form sym- bolizes a poetic idiom which Milton has decided to abandon . Throughout the poem there runs as a refrain a line used to introduce ...
Inhalt
POETIC MEANING I | 1 |
MILTONS LYCIDAS | 21 |
POPES ESSAY ON MAN | 51 |
Urheberrecht | |
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accept already Ancient Mariner appear argument become beginning belief Bolingbroke bring called chapter characters Christian Coleridge Coleridge's Comus concept concerned criticism death devices discursive doctrine doubt effect Eliot Elizabethan Epistle especially Essay evidence existence experience express fact faith Fall feeling figure follows Four gives Grace hand human ideas images imagination important interpretation kind knowledge language later lines literary literature logical Lycidas matter meaning Milton mind moral move Nature never objects once Paradise particular passage pastoral pattern perhaps philosophy Platonism play poem poet poetic poetry Pope Pope's possible present principles provides question reader reason reference relation remains representative seen sense significance speak spirit statement story style suggestion symbols theme theory things thought tion tradition true truth turn understanding unity University whole writes written