The Turning Key: Autobiography and the Subjective Impulse Since 1800Harvard University Press, 1984 - 191 pagina's |
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Pagina 54
... Wordsworth to Muir There are in our existence spots of time , That with distinct pre - eminence retain A renovating virtue , whence , depressed By false opinion and contentious thought , Or aught of heavier or more deadly weight , In ...
... Wordsworth to Muir There are in our existence spots of time , That with distinct pre - eminence retain A renovating virtue , whence , depressed By false opinion and contentious thought , Or aught of heavier or more deadly weight , In ...
Pagina 78
Autobiography and the Subjective Impulse Since 1800 Jerome Hamilton Buckley. Wordsworth - responsive to the subjective impulse , which he believed Wordsworth and the Romantics had first thor- oughly explored and validated . Drilled from ...
Autobiography and the Subjective Impulse Since 1800 Jerome Hamilton Buckley. Wordsworth - responsive to the subjective impulse , which he believed Wordsworth and the Romantics had first thor- oughly explored and validated . Drilled from ...
Pagina 87
... Wordsworth's un- directed subjective impulse , vague and ill - grounded , essen- tially secular yet spuriously religious . Wordsworth was to be valued , he thought , as a poet of " philosophic meditation , " representative of the mind ...
... Wordsworth's un- directed subjective impulse , vague and ill - grounded , essen- tially secular yet spuriously religious . Wordsworth was to be valued , he thought , as a poet of " philosophic meditation , " representative of the mind ...
Inhoudsopgave
THE UNPRECEDENTED SELF | 1 |
TOWARDS AUTOBIOGRAPHY 20 | 20 |
ELEMENTS OF AUTOBIOGRAPHY | 38 |
Copyright | |
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The Turning Key: Autobiography and the Subjective Impulse Since 1800 Jerome H. Buckley Geen voorbeeld beschikbaar - 1984 |
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achieve actual aesthetic apparently autobiography aware becomes beginning called career century character child childhood claims close concern Confessions course critic death described detail direct early emotion English essential eventually example experience fact faith father fear feelings fiction follow give heart Henry hero human identity imagination impressions individual intense Italy John late later least less Letters literary living London meaning memory Mill mind moving narrative nature never nonetheless novel objective observation once ordinary original past perhaps poem poet poetry Prelude present reader reading record regard relate religious remains remember response reveal Romantic Rousseau seeks seems self-consciousness sense setting social sort soul speaking spiritual story subjective tells things thought true truth turn University Press Victorian vision whole Wilde Wordsworth writing York young