The Hamlet Vocation of Coleridge and WordsworthUniversity of Iowa Press, 1986 - 209 sider |
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Side 47
... Strength and in its Weakness " ( as he put it in the next sentence ) . Its weakness was its desultoriness and running to fragments ; its strength was that the fragments tended " to one common End . ” Here in the prospectus he accepted ...
... Strength and in its Weakness " ( as he put it in the next sentence ) . Its weakness was its desultoriness and running to fragments ; its strength was that the fragments tended " to one common End . ” Here in the prospectus he accepted ...
Side 89
... strength , the strength of a man whom all , in- cluding himself , united in calling weak , gave out toward the end of his life . The Hamlet fate ( to quote from Yeats's Statues again ) is to grow " thin from eating flies , " to learn at ...
... strength , the strength of a man whom all , in- cluding himself , united in calling weak , gave out toward the end of his life . The Hamlet fate ( to quote from Yeats's Statues again ) is to grow " thin from eating flies , " to learn at ...
Side 121
... strength to conquer it by force of arms - by marrying the mind of man to the goodly universe in love and holy passion . The breeze that greets the returning Wordsworth in the first lines of The Prelude awakens a " corresponding mild ...
... strength to conquer it by force of arms - by marrying the mind of man to the goodly universe in love and holy passion . The breeze that greets the returning Wordsworth in the first lines of The Prelude awakens a " corresponding mild ...
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
able abstract action become beginning Book called cause character child Cole Coleridge Coleridge's common course criticism death delight describes desire dream duty early earth effort epic essay experience express eyes fact fall fear feeling felt genius give Hamlet happy heart heaven Home at Grasmere hope human idea idealism images imagination impulse intellectual kind knowledge later learned less letter light lines living look matter means militant Milton mind mood moral nature needs never object pain passage passed passion philosophical play poem poet poet's poetic poetry Preface Prelude reason Recluse says seems sense Shakespeare side soul speak spirit story strength sublime talk tender things thou thought tion true truth turned understanding verse vision wild wish Wordsworth worth write wrote