The Romantic Quest |
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Page 1
... romanticism . It will be better , however , to proceed inductively rather than deductively until we reach a point beyond which we cannot advance without defining . I adopt this method not only because it seems education- ally desirable ...
... romanticism . It will be better , however , to proceed inductively rather than deductively until we reach a point beyond which we cannot advance without defining . I adopt this method not only because it seems education- ally desirable ...
Page 2
... romanticism are hostile to each other . On the whole , that also is true . But if political liberalism is an important aspect both of rationalism and of romanticism , and if rationalism and romanticism are essentially opposed , our ...
... romanticism are hostile to each other . On the whole , that also is true . But if political liberalism is an important aspect both of rationalism and of romanticism , and if rationalism and romanticism are essentially opposed , our ...
Page 258
... romanticism could base its dreams ; romanticism provided dreams which sweetened the search for facts . The inevitable divorce occurred in the nineteenth century , when history was almost completely dominated by the aims and methods of ...
... romanticism could base its dreams ; romanticism provided dreams which sweetened the search for facts . The inevitable divorce occurred in the nineteenth century , when history was almost completely dominated by the aims and methods of ...
Contents
NATURE | 1 |
BURKE AND GODWIN | 16 |
JACOBINS AND ANTIJACOBINS 34 V | 34 |
Copyright | |
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attitude ballad beauty believe Burke Byron Byronic hero child Coleridge Coleridge's conception of nature conservatism deism delight descendental desire dream eighteenth century element Elizabethan emotion England English esthetic evil external nature eyes fact feeling France French Revolution Godwin Godwinian happy heart Hence hope human ideal ideas illusion imagination influence intellectual Jacobin John Thelwall Joseph Priestley Keats Keats's less liberal literary literature live Lyrical Ballads means medieval ment merely mind mystical necessity never noble savage Ossian pantisocracy passage passion Peele Castle philosophy Plato poem poet poetic poetry Prelude Prometheus Unbound rationalism rationalistic reason relation religion religious revival Revolution romantic naturalism romanticism romanticists Rousseau Scott sense sentiment Shelley Shelley's sonnet soul Southey Spinoza spirit stanza strong sublime supernatural thee things thou thought Tintern Abbey tion transcendental transcendental element truth universe verse Words Wordsworth writes young