Essays on English Poets and Poetry from the Edinburgh ReviewRoutledge, 1913 - 591 sider |
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Side 45
... style which it was peculiarly easy to justify by argument ; and in support of which great authorities , as well as imposing reasons , were always ready to be produced . It came upon us with the air and the pretension of being the style ...
... style which it was peculiarly easy to justify by argument ; and in support of which great authorities , as well as imposing reasons , were always ready to be produced . It came upon us with the air and the pretension of being the style ...
Side 48
... style in our language . With the wits of Queen Anne this foreign school attained the summit of its reputation ; and has ever since , we think , been declining , though by slow and almost imperceptible gradations . Thomson was the first ...
... style in our language . With the wits of Queen Anne this foreign school attained the summit of its reputation ; and has ever since , we think , been declining , though by slow and almost imperceptible gradations . Thomson was the first ...
Side 55
... style , in which the greater part of them are composed a style which we think must be felt as peculiar by all who peruse them , though it is by no means easy to describe in what its peculiarity consists . It is not , for the most part ...
... style , in which the greater part of them are composed a style which we think must be felt as peculiar by all who peruse them , though it is by no means easy to describe in what its peculiarity consists . It is not , for the most part ...
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admiration Adosinda appear beauty Ben Jonson breast breath bright character Crabbe death delight delineation diction E. K. CHAMBERS earth effect emotions enchanting English English poetry exquisite extracts eyes fair fancy father feeling G. A. AITKEN genius GEORGE CRABBE give Goth grace hand hath heart heaven honour human humble images imagination interest lady less light living Loch Katrine lofty look look'd Lord Byron lov'd lover Macbeth merit mind misanthropy moral mountain Myrrha nature never o'er object once original pain passages passion pathos peculiar Pelayo perhaps picture piece poem poet poetical poetry readers Roderick Rylstone Sard scarcely scene seem'd seems sentiments Shakspeare Siverian smile song soul specimen spirit story style sweet sympathy taste tears tender thee Theodric things thou thought tion tone truth Twas verses voice volume whole wild WILLIAM WORDSWORTH Wordsworth write youth