University of Michigan Publications: Language and literature, Volume 20University of Michigan Press, 1943 - 265 pagine |
Dall'interno del libro
Risultati 1-3 di 19
Pagina 175
... tragedy is important for growth as well as decay . Theirs is a complicated and in- genious theory that Wordsworth had adopted Godwin's ra- tionalism deliberately in a frantic effort to stifle his feeling of remorse for the abandonment ...
... tragedy is important for growth as well as decay . Theirs is a complicated and in- genious theory that Wordsworth had adopted Godwin's ra- tionalism deliberately in a frantic effort to stifle his feeling of remorse for the abandonment ...
Pagina 180
... tragedy , ' Legouis invites us to " Imagine God- win's argument for the necessity of extirpating all the human feelings read in the lurid light of '93 ; conceive his condemna- tion of all traditional rules of conduct interpreted by aid ...
... tragedy , ' Legouis invites us to " Imagine God- win's argument for the necessity of extirpating all the human feelings read in the lurid light of '93 ; conceive his condemna- tion of all traditional rules of conduct interpreted by aid ...
Pagina 200
... tragedy lies not so much in the hideous nature of the attempted remedy as in the persistence of the remorse . " ' 93 But they mistake for the heart of the trag- edy what Wordsworth clearly intended to be the catharsis . Marmaduke's tragedy ...
... tragedy lies not so much in the hideous nature of the attempted remedy as in the persistence of the remorse . " ' 93 But they mistake for the heart of the trag- edy what Wordsworth clearly intended to be the catharsis . Marmaduke's tragedy ...
Sommario
BIOGRAPHY 177095 | 3 |
THE EARLY POEMS | 37 |
THE LETTER TO THE Bishop of Llandaff | 88 |
Copyright | |
3 sezioni non visualizzate
Altre edizioni - Visualizza tutto
University of Michigan Publications: Language and literature, Volume 11 Visualizzazione estratti - 1934 |
University of Michigan Publications: Language and literature, Volume 14 Visualizzazione estratti - 1935 |
University of Michigan Publications: Language and literature, Volume 18 Visualizzazione estratti - 1940 |
Parole e frasi comuni
Beaupuy benevolence Bishop of Llandaff Borderers brother cause Coleridge crime critics David Hartley described Descriptive Sketches Dorothy Wordsworth Dorothy's Early Letters Eldred emotions England English Ernest de Selincourt evidence evil experience father feel female vagrant France French Godwin guardians Guilt and Sorrow H. W. Garrod happiness Hartley Hartley's heart Herbert hope human Ibid Idonea influence Jane Pollard later Legouis letter to Jane lines living Lonsdale Lyrical Ballads Marmaduke Marmaduke's Mathews melancholy ment mind monarchical moral nature Nature's Oswald Oxford passage passions peasants and mechanics philosophy pleasures poem poet Poetical poetry Political Justice Prelude Professor de Selincourt Racedown Ramond reader republican reveals Ruined Cottage sailor Samuel Taylor Coleridge sentimental significance social society soul stanzas suffering suggests thought Tintern Abbey tion truth Uncle verse virtue Walk and Descriptive Watson William and Dorothy William Godwin's William Wordsworth Words Wordsworth wrote worth youth