The National Review, Volume 10W.H. Allen, 1887 - English literature |
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Page 13
... nature for her own sake " ? He can scarcely mean that Keats was the first of modern poets to awaken a love of external nature , for the author of Endymion cannot compare with Wordsworth , or even with Cowper and Thomson , in the close ...
... nature for her own sake " ? He can scarcely mean that Keats was the first of modern poets to awaken a love of external nature , for the author of Endymion cannot compare with Wordsworth , or even with Cowper and Thomson , in the close ...
Page 14
... nature , in other words , the subject - matter , compared with what is contributed by the imagination of the poet ... natural enough , are mere embodiments of the poet's own changing moods . Shelley's dramatis persone bear , as a rule ...
... nature , in other words , the subject - matter , compared with what is contributed by the imagination of the poet ... natural enough , are mere embodiments of the poet's own changing moods . Shelley's dramatis persone bear , as a rule ...
Page 15
... nature of Keats ' genius . Again , as to Keats ' method of representing nature , it appears to me that neither the poet himself nor his latest biographer realise the fundamental difference between his genius and that of the greatest ...
... nature of Keats ' genius . Again , as to Keats ' method of representing nature , it appears to me that neither the poet himself nor his latest biographer realise the fundamental difference between his genius and that of the greatest ...
Page 16
... nature from a moral order and system existing in their own minds . Even if we do not go so far as to find , as Horace did in Homer , more moral philosophy than in the works of Chrysippus and Crantor put together , it is plain that the ...
... nature from a moral order and system existing in their own minds . Even if we do not go so far as to find , as Horace did in Homer , more moral philosophy than in the works of Chrysippus and Crantor put together , it is plain that the ...
Page 18
... Nature , or , at least , organized society , appeared to him a confused and shifting scene , in which the " hungry genera- tions " trod each other down in a chaotic struggle , while only in imagination or in sleep ( an idea that was a ...
... Nature , or , at least , organized society , appeared to him a confused and shifting scene , in which the " hungry genera- tions " trod each other down in a chaotic struggle , while only in imagination or in sleep ( an idea that was a ...
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