Lectures on English Literature: From Chaucer to TennysonParry & McMillan, 1855 - 387 sidor |
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... Poet whose memory he most revered , and whose writings had interwoven themselves with his intellectual and moral being . " I do not know , " he said in one of his letters to his family , " what I have ever done to deserve all this ...
... Poet whose memory he most revered , and whose writings had interwoven themselves with his intellectual and moral being . " I do not know , " he said in one of his letters to his family , " what I have ever done to deserve all this ...
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... poet each : Till at the last she set herself to man Like perfect music unto noble words ; And so these twain , upon the skirts of Time , Sit side by side , full summ'd in all their powers , Dispensing harvest ; Self - reverent each ...
... poet each : Till at the last she set herself to man Like perfect music unto noble words ; And so these twain , upon the skirts of Time , Sit side by side , full summ'd in all their powers , Dispensing harvest ; Self - reverent each ...
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... poet's sister , adds the comment , " Were I to say that a poet finds his best advisers among his female friends , it would be speaking from my own experience , and the greatest poet of the age would confirm it by his . But never was any ...
... poet's sister , adds the comment , " Were I to say that a poet finds his best advisers among his female friends , it would be speaking from my own experience , and the greatest poet of the age would confirm it by his . But never was any ...
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... poetic taste , our judgments and feelings for the poets . One meets perpetually with a confident partiality for some poet of the day , or a confident antipathy to another ; and , all the while , such confidence may be entirely unequal ...
... poetic taste , our judgments and feelings for the poets . One meets perpetually with a confident partiality for some poet of the day , or a confident antipathy to another ; and , all the while , such confidence may be entirely unequal ...
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... poets of former centuries . Let him , who is quick to con- demn , or slow to admire , ask whether the fault may not be in himself : -it may be the caprice or the apathy of uncultivated taste : he , and he alone , whose capacity of ...
... poets of former centuries . Let him , who is quick to con- demn , or slow to admire , ask whether the fault may not be in himself : -it may be the caprice or the apathy of uncultivated taste : he , and he alone , whose capacity of ...
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Lectures on English Literature: From Chaucer to Tennyson Henry Reed Obegränsad förhandsgranskning - 1855 |
Lectures on English Literature: From Chaucer to Tennyson Henry Reed Obegränsad förhandsgranskning - 1855 |
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