Imagination and Fancy: Or, Selections from the English Poets, Illustrative of Those First Requisites of Their Art; with Markings of the Best Passages, Critical Notices of the Writers, and an Essay in Answer to the Question, "What is Poetry?"Wiley and Putnam, 1845 - 255 sider |
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Side ix
... thought invidious in an Editor , who has said more of his contemporaries than most men ; and who would gladly give specimens of the latter poets in future volumes . One of the objects indeed of this preface is to state , that should the ...
... thought invidious in an Editor , who has said more of his contemporaries than most men ; and who would gladly give specimens of the latter poets in future volumes . One of the objects indeed of this preface is to state , that should the ...
Side 2
... thought , feeling , expres- sion , imagination , action , character , and continuity , all in the largest amount and highest degree , is the greatest poet . Poetry includes whatsoever of painting can be made visible to the mind's eye ...
... thought , feeling , expres- sion , imagination , action , character , and continuity , all in the largest amount and highest degree , is the greatest poet . Poetry includes whatsoever of painting can be made visible to the mind's eye ...
Side 10
... thought it was that humankind Were tongue - confounded . Pass him , and say naught : For as he speaketh language known of none , So none can speak save jargon to himself . " Assuredly it could not have been easy to find a fiction so un ...
... thought it was that humankind Were tongue - confounded . Pass him , and say naught : For as he speaketh language known of none , So none can speak save jargon to himself . " Assuredly it could not have been easy to find a fiction so un ...
Side 11
... thought childish , made a childish mistake . His criticism is just such as a boy might pique himself upon , who was educated on mechanical principles , and thought he had outgrown his Goody Two - shoes . " With a wonderful dimness of ...
... thought childish , made a childish mistake . His criticism is just such as a boy might pique himself upon , who was educated on mechanical principles , and thought he had outgrown his Goody Two - shoes . " With a wonderful dimness of ...
Side 12
... thought they could not exist . Hence the serpent Python of Chaucer , Sleeping against the sun upon a day , when Apollo slew him . Hence the chariot - drawing dolphins of Spenser , softly swimming along the shore lest they should hurt ...
... thought they could not exist . Hence the serpent Python of Chaucer , Sleeping against the sun upon a day , when Apollo slew him . Hence the chariot - drawing dolphins of Spenser , softly swimming along the shore lest they should hurt ...
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auld bard Beaumont and Fletcher beauty Ben Jonson bless bonnie breath Burns's called character charm Chaucer dear death delight divine doth dream Dumfries earth Ellisland eyes Faerie Queene fair fairy fancy fear feeling felt flowers frae gauger genius hand happy hath head hear heard heart heaven Hector Macneil hour human imagination inspired knew labor lady light live look Lycidas Macbeth Mauchline melancholy Milton mind mirth moral morning Mossgiel muse nature never noble o'er passage passion perhaps pity pleasure poem poet poet's poetical poetry poor pride rhyme Robert Burns round Scotland Scottish Shakspeare Shanter sing sleep song soul Spenser spirit stanza sugh sweet Sycorax Tamburlaine tears tell thee things Thomson thou art thought tion TITANIA truth verse voice Whyles wife William Burnes wind witch wood words young youth