The Romantic Quest |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 50
Page
... course in the romantic period . I might have done more to balance the proportions of the original hasty sketch and render it more nearly complete . Such revision , however , would have drawn me toward a full - dress his- tory of the ...
... course in the romantic period . I might have done more to balance the proportions of the original hasty sketch and render it more nearly complete . Such revision , however , would have drawn me toward a full - dress his- tory of the ...
Page 2
... course will be devoted . The naturalistic aspect of the romantic movement is in itself a complex and extensive ... courses , you have probably been told that these isms were watchwords of the romantic movement . On the whole , that is ...
... course will be devoted . The naturalistic aspect of the romantic movement is in itself a complex and extensive ... courses , you have probably been told that these isms were watchwords of the romantic movement . On the whole , that is ...
Page 120
... course I am not at- tempting to impose an identity of attitude upon all the authors quoted . They differed greatly in their likes and dislikes : Collins ' The Manners is not Blake's Jerusalem . I wish merely to suggest that these ...
... course I am not at- tempting to impose an identity of attitude upon all the authors quoted . They differed greatly in their likes and dislikes : Collins ' The Manners is not Blake's Jerusalem . I wish merely to suggest that these ...
Contents
NATURE | 1 |
BURKE AND GODWIN | 16 |
JACOBINS AND ANTIJACOBINS 34 V | 34 |
Copyright | |
21 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
appears associated attitude ballad beauty become begins believe Byron called child close Coleridge Coleridge's conception course desire dream early eighteenth century element Elizabethan emotion English experience expression external eyes fact feeling felt France give Godwin happy heart hope human ideal ideas illusion imagination important influence interest Italy Keats kind knowledge later less letter light lines literary literature live looked material means medieval merely mind nature necessity never objects once passage past perhaps period philosophy poem poet poetry political present rationalism reason regarded relation religion religious represent romantic romanticism romanticists seems sense sentiment Shelley soul Southey speak spirit strong suggest things thou thought tion transcendental true truth turn universe whole wish Wordsworth writes written young