English Romantic PoetsHarold Bloom A collection of critical essays on the work of the Romantic poets--Blake, Wordsworth, Coleridge, Byron, Shelley, and Keats. |
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Page 81
... existence . The limits begin to vanish in the first stanza with the figure of the sound overflowing the rim of the vale . The mystery of human existence : that is the first meaning of the bird metaphors of the second stanza . The ...
... existence . The limits begin to vanish in the first stanza with the figure of the sound overflowing the rim of the vale . The mystery of human existence : that is the first meaning of the bird metaphors of the second stanza . The ...
Page 161
... existence . To envision and realize the phantom person poetically the poet must empty his imagery of piety and sense , allowing in their place some measure of daemonic possession . The one necessary poetic act will be to utter , to ...
... existence . To envision and realize the phantom person poetically the poet must empty his imagery of piety and sense , allowing in their place some measure of daemonic possession . The one necessary poetic act will be to utter , to ...
Page 280
... existence . Yet Tennyson , for all his ambition , stays within the bounds of elegy . Adonais , in the astonishing sequence of its last eighteen stanzas , is no more an elegy proper than Yeats's " Byzantium " poems are . Like the ...
... existence . Yet Tennyson , for all his ambition , stays within the bounds of elegy . Adonais , in the astonishing sequence of its last eighteen stanzas , is no more an elegy proper than Yeats's " Byzantium " poems are . Like the ...
Contents
The Keys to the Gates | 21 |
The Bard of Sensibility and the Form | 41 |
Blakes Critique | 55 |
Copyright | |
15 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
Adonais allegory becomes begins Blake Byron Cain called Christian Coleridge Coleridge's consciousness creation creative critics dark death Demogorgon dialectic divine dramatic dream Eichhorn Endymion Eolian epic eternal experience Ezekiel Fall of Hyperion feeling Fiction figure Four Zoas Freud Harold Harold Bloom heart Heaven human imagery imagination Jerusalem Jupiter Keats Keats's Kubla Kubla Khan language Lara light lines literary Luvah lyric M. H. Abrams means Merkabah metaphor metaphysical Milton mind mode moral mystery myth mythology nature Ode to Psyche Oriental original Paradise passage passion poem poem's poet poet's poetic poetry Prelude present Prometheus Unbound prophetic quest reader represented Romantic Romanticism Rousseau Satan scene seems sense sequence Shelley Shelley's song soul sound Spectre spirit stanza sublime symbol Tharmas things thou thought tradition Triumph tropes truth turn University Press Urizen Urthona vision visionary William Blake words Wordsworth writing