A Second Gallery of Literary PortraitsJ. Hogg, 1852 - 330 sidor |
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Sida 8
... wonder among the sons of God ? Thus died Milton , the prince of modern men , accepting death as gently and silently as the sky receives into its arms the waning moon . We are re- minded of a description in " Hyperion , " of the death of ...
... wonder among the sons of God ? Thus died Milton , the prince of modern men , accepting death as gently and silently as the sky receives into its arms the waning moon . We are re- minded of a description in " Hyperion , " of the death of ...
Sida 10
... day life , but of every - day life shown under a certain soft ideal strangeness , like a picture or a prospect , through which you look by inverting your head . Your wonder is , how he can thus elevate the 10 JOHN MILTON .
... day life , but of every - day life shown under a certain soft ideal strangeness , like a picture or a prospect , through which you look by inverting your head . Your wonder is , how he can thus elevate the 10 JOHN MILTON .
Sida 11
... wonder at every sign , and shop , and shopkeeper he sees . But we maintain , that those always write best on any subject who are best acquainted with it , who know it in all its shades and phases ; and that such minute and personal ...
... wonder at every sign , and shop , and shopkeeper he sees . But we maintain , that those always write best on any subject who are best acquainted with it , who know it in all its shades and phases ; and that such minute and personal ...
Sida 13
... of dreams . It is , consequently , a naked and gloomy poem ; and as its hero triumphs in death , so it seems to fall upon and crush its reader into pros- trate wonder , rather than to create warm and willing JOHN MILTON . 13.
... of dreams . It is , consequently , a naked and gloomy poem ; and as its hero triumphs in death , so it seems to fall upon and crush its reader into pros- trate wonder , rather than to create warm and willing JOHN MILTON . 13.
Sida 14
George Gilfillan. trate wonder , rather than to create warm and willing admiration . You believe it to be a powerful poem , and you tremble as you believe . What a contrast in " Comus , " the growth and bloom rather than the work of his ...
George Gilfillan. trate wonder , rather than to create warm and willing admiration . You believe it to be a powerful poem , and you tremble as you believe . What a contrast in " Comus , " the growth and bloom rather than the work of his ...
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admiration amid beautiful Bunyan burning Byron called calm Carlyle character Christianity Cobbett Coleridge Crabbe criticism dark death deep divine Dr Johnson dream earnest earth Edinburgh Review eloquent Emerson eternal Eugene Aram fancy feeling Festus fire Foster genius George Dawson gloom glory grandeur heart heaven hell human humour imagination intellect Isaac Taylor John Bunyan language Leigh Hunt less light literary living Lochnagar look Macaulay melancholy Milton mind misery moral mountains nature ness never night object Paradise Lost passion peculiar Pilgrim's Progress poems poet poetical poetry popular praise profound prophet prose Quincey seems shadow Shakspere Shelley sincere song sorrow soul speak spirit stand stars strong style sublime sweet sympathy tears thing Thomas Carlyle Thomas De Quincey Thomas Macaulay thou thought tion trembling true truth verse vision voice William Cobbett wonder words Wordsworth writings