The Muse in CouncilSidgwick & Jackson, 1925 - 254 pagina's |
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Pagina 115
... delight ; and after one person and one age has exhausted all its divine effluence which their peculiar relations enable them to share , another and yet another succeeds , and new relations are ever developed , the source of an ...
... delight ; and after one person and one age has exhausted all its divine effluence which their peculiar relations enable them to share , another and yet another succeeds , and new relations are ever developed , the source of an ...
Pagina 168
... delight never fails , but it is not the less eagerly welcomed because it is not a new delight . It is the measure of Alice Meynell's excellence as a poet that after we know a dozen of her poems we feel that there is no possible further ...
... delight never fails , but it is not the less eagerly welcomed because it is not a new delight . It is the measure of Alice Meynell's excellence as a poet that after we know a dozen of her poems we feel that there is no possible further ...
Pagina 173
... delight- A shepherdess of sheep . She holds her little thoughts in sight , Though gay they run and leap . She is so circumspect and right ; She has her soul to keep . She walks - the lady of my delight- A shepherdess of sheep . The line ...
... delight- A shepherdess of sheep . She holds her little thoughts in sight , Though gay they run and leap . She is so circumspect and right ; She has her soul to keep . She walks - the lady of my delight- A shepherdess of sheep . The line ...
Inhoudsopgave
The Poet and Communication | 9 |
The Poet and Tradition | 30 |
Simple Sensuous and Passionate | 54 |
Copyright | |
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Abercrombie achievement admirable æsthetic Alice Meynell's Amy Lowell artist beauty better Boswell Brooke Brooke's Burns Byron character common Coventry Patmore creative critical darkness quicken defect delight distinction Edwin Arlington Robinson emotion English poetry example experience expression faculty genius gift heart Henley Henley's human imagination instinct intellectual interest John Milton Johnson judgment Keats kind Ledwidge less Lord Dunsany lucidity lyric manner Masefield matter Matthew Arnold means ment merely Milton mind mood moral moving nature never once Paradise Lost passion perceive perhaps Philoctetes phrase poems poet poet's poetic profound question rare reader realization Robinson Samson Agonistes seems sense Shakespeare Shelley Shelley's Songs speak spirit Stopford Brooke sure thee thing Thomas Hardy thou thought tion to-day touch tradition tragic true truth understanding verse virtue vision vivid volume W. B. Yeats whole words Wordsworth writing youth