The Romantic Quest |
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Page 125
... objects , and it demands either the expression or sugges- tion of a bond between those objects and the deepest emotions of the poet as a unique individual . Such a lyric , then , uses external nature to clarify and give body to inward ...
... objects , and it demands either the expression or sugges- tion of a bond between those objects and the deepest emotions of the poet as a unique individual . Such a lyric , then , uses external nature to clarify and give body to inward ...
Page 140
... objects is the disappearance of those objects in a flash of mystical immediacy ? Are we here confronted with an inconsistency which runs through the fabric of romanticism ? Without much hope of being able to answer this question , I ...
... objects is the disappearance of those objects in a flash of mystical immediacy ? Are we here confronted with an inconsistency which runs through the fabric of romanticism ? Without much hope of being able to answer this question , I ...
Page 351
... objects merely because they " counterfeit infinity . " He loves them in and for them- selves ; his poetry , both in theory and in practice , is based upon the most devoted attention to the real . On the other hand , he is certainly not ...
... objects merely because they " counterfeit infinity . " He loves them in and for them- selves ; his poetry , both in theory and in practice , is based upon the most devoted attention to the real . On the other hand , he is certainly not ...
Contents
NATURE | 1 |
BURKE AND GODWIN | 16 |
JACOBINS AND ANTIJACOBINS 34 V | 34 |
Copyright | |
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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