The Garden in Victorian Literature |
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Side 154
... most complex and ambiguous of all landscapes ' , and that some gardens ' are created specifically for the antisocial purposes ' , ' to a certain extent it might be said that the Victorians retreated from the mountains into the [ ? ] ...
... most complex and ambiguous of all landscapes ' , and that some gardens ' are created specifically for the antisocial purposes ' , ' to a certain extent it might be said that the Victorians retreated from the mountains into the [ ? ] ...
Side 159
The point has been made that ' for the Victorians , nature generally functions as an anomalous symbol having the irreconcilable features of beauty and cruelty ' , and that it was ' viewed for the most part as an indifferent rather than ...
The point has been made that ' for the Victorians , nature generally functions as an anomalous symbol having the irreconcilable features of beauty and cruelty ' , and that it was ' viewed for the most part as an indifferent rather than ...
Side 165
... so long as they are uncorrupted by the “ evil ” influence of civilization and unrestrained by authoritarian discipline'.27 The Victorians may have inherited the ' cult of noble emotions ' from the Romantics , but most conventionally ...
... so long as they are uncorrupted by the “ evil ” influence of civilization and unrestrained by authoritarian discipline'.27 The Victorians may have inherited the ' cult of noble emotions ' from the Romantics , but most conventionally ...
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Indhold
Introduction | 3 |
The Trim Garden | 9 |
The Scented Garden | 37 |
Copyright | |
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Almindelige termer og sætninger
aesthetic appears associated attention beauty beds called century Chapter characters classes close considered contemporary contrast cottage cottage garden critical cultivated cultural described Dickens domestic early effects England English evidence example experience expression feeling fiction floral flowers formal functions garden George green grounds horticultural human idea ideal imaginative important industrial interest John kind Lady landscape lawn least leaves less literature living London look means mind Morris narrator nature never novel novelists observer old-fashioned park particular past perhaps picture picturesque plants poem poetry poets positive possible practices presented qualities Quoted readers reasons reference relations romantic roses rural scene seems sense setting significance social space suggest symbol taste tend Tennyson things town trees trim values Victorian wall wild women writers
Henvisninger til denne bog
Worlds of Sense: Exploring the Senses in History and Across Cultures Constance Classen Ingen forhåndsvisning - 1993 |
The Vital Landscape: Nature and the Built Environment in Nineteenth-century ... William M. Taylor Ingen forhåndsvisning - 2004 |