| Max Koch - Comparative literature - 1901 - 534 pages
...but when I have laid the book down, I do not think about him. I remember a hurry of pleasure but I have few distinct forms that people my mind, nor any...either communicated to me, or taught me to recognise . . . Take from Bürger's poems the incidents, which are seldom or ever of his own invention, and still... | |
| Karl Julius Theodor Zeiger - English literature - 1901 - 80 pages
...but when I have laid the book down, I do not think about him. I remember a hurry of pleasure but I have few distinct forms that people my mind, nor any...either communicated to me, or taught me to recognise . . . Take from Bürger's poems the incidents, which are seldom or ever of his own invention, and still... | |
| William Wordsworth - English poetry - 1977 - 308 pages
...but when I have laid the book down I do not think about him. I remember a hurry of pleasure, but I have few distinct forms that people my mind, nor any...either communicated to me, or taught me to recognise. [EL, p. 234] Demonstrating the sentimentalist's concern with the beat of his own pulse, the letter... | |
| Martha Woodmansee - Art - 1994 - 224 pages
...but when I have laid the book down I do not think about him. I remember a hurry of pleasure, but I have few distinct forms that people my mind, nor any...either communicated to me, or taught me to recognise. Burger is not a poet who demands to be reread, and the reason for this, Wordsworth suggests, lies in... | |
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