The Castle of Indolence, and Other PoemsUniversity of Kansas Press, 1961 - 222 pages |
From inside the book
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Page 2
... virtue progresses and succeeds to the point of luxury , then sinks into vice and corruption . The early career of the Knight of Arts and Industry is in large part identical with the progress of Liberty , and culminates in British ...
... virtue progresses and succeeds to the point of luxury , then sinks into vice and corruption . The early career of the Knight of Arts and Industry is in large part identical with the progress of Liberty , and culminates in British ...
Page 5
... Virtue , " in the phrase of Areopagitica . Thomson edited Areopagitica in 1738 , and a few weeks later published his lines To the Memory of the Right Honourable the Lord Talbot , in which he wrote : Nor could he brook in studious Shade ...
... Virtue , " in the phrase of Areopagitica . Thomson edited Areopagitica in 1738 , and a few weeks later published his lines To the Memory of the Right Honourable the Lord Talbot , in which he wrote : Nor could he brook in studious Shade ...
Page 49
... virtue , a noble achievement of the Knight of Arts and Industry . Meanwhile , does the poet himself really need to be saved , and if so , how can he save himself ? The question has already arisen in connection with the climactic visions ...
... virtue , a noble achievement of the Knight of Arts and Industry . Meanwhile , does the poet himself really need to be saved , and if so , how can he save himself ? The question has already arisen in connection with the climactic visions ...
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Common terms and phrases
allegorical Archimage Armstrong Arts and Industry Bard Beauty Bliss Bower Brentford Britannia British Canto Castle of Indolence deep delights Descartes dream Dunciad Earth effect eighteenth century elaborate enchanter English Harp Heart Heaven Hill Hughes Hypochondria Idless imitation inspired Introduction Isle James Thomson John John Conduitt John Hughes Knight of Arts landscape Landskips Liberty light lines Lucretius Luxborough Luxury Lycidas Lyttelton Mallet Milton Mind moral Murdoch Muse MUSIDORA Nature Nature's Newtonian nought Numbers o'er panegyric passage Peace philosophic Pleasure poet Poetry pour'd Power praise quoted reference retirement round rural Scene Seasons second edition Shade Shenstone shine Sir Isaac Newton Sleep soft Solitude song Soul sound Spenser Spenserian Spenserian stanzas Spirit stanza Streams sweet thee theme Thom Thomson's poem thou thro Title-page Toil Vale verse Virtue vision ween wild Wind words World Wretch xlviii