Lost Angels of a Ruined Paradise: Themes of Cosmic Strife in Romantic Tragedy |
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Page 30
... responsibility for this crime against lawful authority and human sympathy ? He does not examine the evidence of the ... responsible for his actions because our impulses follow the laws of physical necessity . Action is transitory - a ...
... responsibility for this crime against lawful authority and human sympathy ? He does not examine the evidence of the ... responsible for his actions because our impulses follow the laws of physical necessity . Action is transitory - a ...
Page 66
... responsible for the pantheist's " confusion of God with the world ? " To answer this question , one should pay closer attention to the way the natural world appears in Coleridge's tragedy . Wordsworth's The Borderers presents a unified ...
... responsible for the pantheist's " confusion of God with the world ? " To answer this question , one should pay closer attention to the way the natural world appears in Coleridge's tragedy . Wordsworth's The Borderers presents a unified ...
Page 67
... responsible for his vision of the world , and he uses images of the natural landscape not only as a backdrop to character , but as inter- changeable with the mental landscape of the character whose con- sciousness it reflects . Thus the ...
... responsible for his vision of the world , and he uses images of the natural landscape not only as a backdrop to character , but as inter- changeable with the mental landscape of the character whose con- sciousness it reflects . Thus the ...
Contents
II | 12 |
IV | 72 |
Images of Nature and the Cosmic Structure | 106 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
accept action Adam affirm alienation allegorical Alvar appears associated Auranthe Beatrice Beatrice's beauty becomes blind Borderers brother Byron called cause Cenci centre character claims Coleridge Coleridge's comes Consequently cosmic crime critics darkness death demonic denies describes desire despair dilemma direction divine drama effect error evil existence experience face fact faith fall fallen father feels figure final follows forces guilt heart Heaven Hell Herbert hero hero's heroine hope human Idonea Infinite innocence Keats Letter light loss lovers Ludolph man's Manfred Manfred's Marmaduke moral murder Nature offence Ordonio original Oswald Otho Oxford Paradise perfection play poet poet's Press question realm recognize relationship Remorse responsible reversal revolutionary role Romantic Romanticism Satan scene seems sense Shelley Shelley's significance Spirit spite stands structure suffering symbolic takes Teresa things tragedy tragic truth turns tyrannical ultimately union Univ universe villain vision wants wedding Wordsworth's York