The Poetry of the PeriodGarland Pub., 1986 - 294 sider |
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Side 143
... past and the future , without ever once being able to satisfy our , and , we presume , his own , ineradicable longings for a great contempora- neous poem . In Mr. Swinburne , endowed as he is with more fire and less skill , the results ...
... past and the future , without ever once being able to satisfy our , and , we presume , his own , ineradicable longings for a great contempora- neous poem . In Mr. Swinburne , endowed as he is with more fire and less skill , the results ...
Side 146
... past . Again and again he repeats what it is he can and what it is he cannot do : - " Yet as their words are no more known aright Through lapse of many ages , and no man Can any more across the waters wan Behold those singing women of ...
... past . Again and again he repeats what it is he can and what it is he cannot do : - " Yet as their words are no more known aright Through lapse of many ages , and no man Can any more across the waters wan Behold those singing women of ...
Side 153
... past , they sit quietly 66 Watching the dark night hide the gloomy earth . " But how can great poetry spring from such a mood or attitude as that ? Impossible - for ever impossible ! Great poetry is the growth of confident creed and ...
... past , they sit quietly 66 Watching the dark night hide the gloomy earth . " But how can great poetry spring from such a mood or attitude as that ? Impossible - for ever impossible ! Great poetry is the growth of confident creed and ...
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admirers Alfred Austin Algernon Charles Swinburne angel Anthony Trollope Arnold assertion bards beautiful blank verse Browning Browning's Byron child compositions confess creed critic divine doubt Dream Dream of Gerontius E. S. Dallas earth English ESSAYS feel feminine muse garden genius golden half-words Harris Harris's heart heaven Homer Idylls imagination Lady of Pain Leaves of Grass less light literary literature living Lyric masculine matter Matthew Arnold mean mind Morning Land Morris mountain natural never o'er once opinion Paracelsus passage perhaps period poem poet poet's poetical poetry produce prose quoted reader remarkable Roman Catholic Rossetti scarcely sense Shakespeare Shelley sing singer song Sordello soul speak spirit strain strong sublime supposed sweet Swinburne Swinburne's synthesist Tennyson thee theological things thou thought tion to-day truth turn utter verse voice Walt Whitman whilst words Wordsworth write written