Revaluation: Tradition & Development in English Poetry |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 30
Page 115
... bring into poetry the full vitality of the age . For his later contemporaries and their successors the situation had changed for the worse . In the Augustan heyday there was an extraordinary positiveness , an extra- ordinary effect of ...
... bring into poetry the full vitality of the age . For his later contemporaries and their successors the situation had changed for the worse . In the Augustan heyday there was an extraordinary positiveness , an extra- ordinary effect of ...
Page 122
... bring from prose . And , in the eighteenth century , Blake's Hear the Voice of the Bard has a structure very much ... bringing Blake in here should be fairly plain : he represents the antithesis to the Augustan ethos ( to which Mr. Eliot ...
... bring from prose . And , in the eighteenth century , Blake's Hear the Voice of the Bard has a structure very much ... bringing Blake in here should be fairly plain : he represents the antithesis to the Augustan ethos ( to which Mr. Eliot ...
Page 187
... bring to light Man's prudence and man's fiery might , Time may restore us in his course Goethe's sage mind and Byron's force : But where will Europe's latter hour Again find Wordsworth's healing power ? Others will teach us how to dare ...
... bring to light Man's prudence and man's fiery might , Time may restore us in his course Goethe's sage mind and Byron's force : But where will Europe's latter hour Again find Wordsworth's healing power ? Others will teach us how to dare ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
achievement admirable aesthetic Augustan beauty Ben Jonson bright Carew characteristic civilization Coleridge complete contemplation contrast course critical decorum Donne Dryden Dunciad effect eighteenth century Elegy Eliot emotional English poetry essay essential fact feeling flowers genius Gray's heart Heaven human Hyperion idiom imagery imagination insistence inspiration intelligence Jonson Keats Keats's kind less light literary living Lycidas lyrical Lytton Strachey Mac Flecknoe Marvell's Matthew Arnold merely Metaphysical Milton mind mode Mont Blanc moral movement nature ness Nightingale Note o'er obvious offered Oxford Book Paradise Lost passage phrase plain poem poet poetic polite Pope Pope's present prose realized relation representative rich Romantic Samson Agonistes satiric seems sense sensibility sensuous Shakespeare Shelley Shelley's significant solemn song soul spirit stanza strength stress subtle suggest sweet taste Tennyson thee things thou thought Tintern Abbey tion tone tradition turn uncon Victorian virtues words Wordsworth