The Charles Lamb BulletinCharles Lamb Society, 2006 |
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... fact of loss , very movingly . Although the poet implicitly tells us at the end of the ' Ode ' that this is a poem that gives us ' Thoughts that do often lie too deep for tears ' ( 1. 206 ) , there are lines that are almost difficult to ...
... fact of loss , very movingly . Although the poet implicitly tells us at the end of the ' Ode ' that this is a poem that gives us ' Thoughts that do often lie too deep for tears ' ( 1. 206 ) , there are lines that are almost difficult to ...
Sida 15
... fact that Wordsworth is the hero of his own epic while Milton's hero is always an other . Wordsworth's prolonged justification of his inspiration and subject matter account for the absence of another epic convention in the opening of ...
... fact that Wordsworth is the hero of his own epic while Milton's hero is always an other . Wordsworth's prolonged justification of his inspiration and subject matter account for the absence of another epic convention in the opening of ...
Sida 17
... fact that it seems altogether unnecessary : Wordsworth would not be ' plagiarizing ' simply to incorporate his former words into the present poem the way that Horace would have ' plagiarized ' his fictional businessman had he done so ...
... fact that it seems altogether unnecessary : Wordsworth would not be ' plagiarizing ' simply to incorporate his former words into the present poem the way that Horace would have ' plagiarized ' his fictional businessman had he done so ...
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Articles | 38 |
Irreverent Glimpses of the Poet Laureate Three Informal | 39 |
Hazlitt versus Malthus | 47 |
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Angler Book Cambridge character Charles and Mary Charles Lamb Bulletin Charles Lamb Society child childhood Church Coleridge Coleridge's Cottage criticism death described Dickens Dorothy Dorothy Wordsworth Dove Cottage Duncan Wu E. V. Lucas edition Editor Elia Elian emotional English essay feeling Furness Abbey Goslar Grasmere Hazlitt human humour Hunt Ibid imagination immortality James John Clare John Strachan Jonathan Lamb's later lecture letter lines literary literature living London Magazine look Lyrical Ballads Mary Lamb Mary Wedd mind Monthly Repository Moxon nature Oxford passage Pater perhaps play pleasure poem poet poetic poetry portrait present published Quincey reader recollection Robert Robert Woof Romantic Romanticism seems sense Shakespeare sonnet spirit stanza suggests tale things Thomas thought Tintern Abbey translation Tulk Two-Part Prelude Unitarian University vols Walter Pater Walton William Hazlitt William Wordsworth Woof word Wordsworth Trust writing wrote