Byron: Romantic Paradox |
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Page 16
... no sufficient means of exercising a very vital energy , he was condemned to a permanent suffering which led him to doubt not only the goodness of God but the possibility of any final reconciliation between the soul and the senses .
... no sufficient means of exercising a very vital energy , he was condemned to a permanent suffering which led him to doubt not only the goodness of God but the possibility of any final reconciliation between the soul and the senses .
Page 182
Hence no absolutely final word may be passed on its structure , in the absence of an absolutely final word by its author . The spirit v of the poem , however , is obvious . It is a humorous epic , in an atmosphere of rather serious fun ...
Hence no absolutely final word may be passed on its structure , in the absence of an absolutely final word by its author . The spirit v of the poem , however , is obvious . It is a humorous epic , in an atmosphere of rather serious fun ...
Page 192
either in their expression or by the turn of the final couplet . The following passage , for instance , though distinctly reminiscent of the Prophecy of Dante , and The Lament of Tasso , is nevertheless neither , but unmistakably Don ...
either in their expression or by the turn of the final couplet . The following passage , for instance , though distinctly reminiscent of the Prophecy of Dante , and The Lament of Tasso , is nevertheless neither , but unmistakably Don ...
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