English Romantic Poets: Modern Essays in CriticismM. H. Abrams This highly acclaimed volume contains thirty essays by such leading literary critics as A.O. Lovejoy, Lionel Trilling, C.S. Lewis, F.R. Leavis, Northrop Frye, Harold Bloom, Geoffrey Hartman, Jonathan Wordsworth, and Jack Stillinger. Covering the major poems by each of the important Romantic poets, the contributors present many significant perspectives in modern criticism--old and new, discursive and explicative, mimetic and rhetorical, literal and mythical, archetypal and phenomenological, pro and con. |
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Page 18
... existence was thus often held to be a distinctive trait of Romantic art, on the ground that Christianity is an otherworldly religion: 'in der christlichen Ansicht,' said A. W. Schlegel, die Anschauung des Unendlichen hat das Endliche ...
... existence was thus often held to be a distinctive trait of Romantic art, on the ground that Christianity is an otherworldly religion: 'in der christlichen Ansicht,' said A. W. Schlegel, die Anschauung des Unendlichen hat das Endliche ...
Page 26
... a pleasant epistemological joke for a person who questions the existence of a judgment which is taken out like a watch and consulted by another judgment. But the 'sensibility, as we know, had begun to shift. 26 #ojo. So Foss A&#'ī; o;
... a pleasant epistemological joke for a person who questions the existence of a judgment which is taken out like a watch and consulted by another judgment. But the 'sensibility, as we know, had begun to shift. 26 #ojo. So Foss A&#'ī; o;
Page 62
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Page 63
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Page 66
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Aeschylus appears associated beauty become beginning Blake Byron called character child Coleridge Coleridge's comes course critics death described Don Juan dream earth effect emotional English example existence experience expression eyes fact Fall feeling figure final give heart heaven hope human idea imagination important innocence interest Keats Keats's kind later least leaves less Letters light lines living look means merely mind moral move nature never object once pain passage perhaps poem poet poetic poetry possible present Prometheus question reader reason relation Romantic Romanticism seems sense Shelley Shelley's song soul speak spirit stanza suggest symbols theme things thou thought tion truth turn universe verse vision whole wind Wordsworth writing written