The Critical Temper: From Milton to Romantic literatureMartin Tucker |
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Page 134
... means when he says to her after praising her beauty , There was another meaning in these gifts , and that is what she understands him to mean , and what Milton in his first version meant him to mean and her to understand him to mean ...
... means when he says to her after praising her beauty , There was another meaning in these gifts , and that is what she understands him to mean , and what Milton in his first version meant him to mean and her to understand him to mean ...
Page 239
... means simply two things : the ability to see through to reality and the ability to make the forms one puts on reflect one's private life or " nature . " Folly , on the other hand , means the substi- tution of appearance for one's nature ...
... means simply two things : the ability to see through to reality and the ability to make the forms one puts on reflect one's private life or " nature . " Folly , on the other hand , means the substi- tution of appearance for one's nature ...
Page 313
... means of expressing its characteristic emotional complexity , as Byron also did , in the oblique , liberating forces of irony and ambiguity . Don Juan is , in fact , one of the most pertinent of all poems for us today , reminding us at ...
... means of expressing its characteristic emotional complexity , as Byron also did , in the oblique , liberating forces of irony and ambiguity . Don Juan is , in fact , one of the most pertinent of all poems for us today , reminding us at ...
Contents
Joseph Addison 16721719 | 3 |
John Bunyan 16281688 | 9 |
Robert Burns 17591796 | 15 |
Copyright | |
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achieved beauty Blake Blake's Bonamy Dobrée Byron Cambridge century character Charles Lamb Coleridge Coleridge's comedy comic complete Crabbe criticism death dramatic Dryden emotional Essays Etherege experience expression fact feeling friends genius George Saintsbury H. W. Garrod Harvard Univ Hazlitt hero Houyhnhnms human Hyperion ideas imagination Jane Austen John John Keats Jonathan Wild Keats Keats's Kubla Khan Lamb later letters literary literature living London Milton mind moral narrative nature never Oxford Univ Paradise Lost passages passion perhaps philosophical play plot poem poet poetic poetry political Pope Princeton Prometheus prose reader reason Restoration Comedy Romantic satire scenes Scott seems sense sentimental Shakespeare Shelley Shelley's social Song Southey spirit stanza story style Swift symbolic T. S. Eliot theme things Thomas thought tion Tom Jones tradition tragedy truth verse vision vols whole William words Wordsworth writing wrote York