Wordsworth's Informed Reader: Structures of Experience in His PoetryVanderbilt University Press, 1988 - 270 sider |
Inni boken
Resultat 1-3 av 22
Side 80
... weakness but as sublime human power . The character of the Solitary in The Excursion demonstrates the importance of perceiving humanity in this way . At the root of his dejec- tion lies an inability or unwillingness to perceive such ...
... weakness but as sublime human power . The character of the Solitary in The Excursion demonstrates the importance of perceiving humanity in this way . At the root of his dejec- tion lies an inability or unwillingness to perceive such ...
Side 170
... weakness , of a human reality that does not always answer its demand for grandeur , is a possi- ble response in the sonnet " Composed on the Eve of the Marriage of a Friend . " Observing the young bride , the narrator is not deceived by ...
... weakness , of a human reality that does not always answer its demand for grandeur , is a possi- ble response in the sonnet " Composed on the Eve of the Marriage of a Friend . " Observing the young bride , the narrator is not deceived by ...
Side 193
... weakness . With mental power developed , the reader can then perceive echoes of the visionary in many of Wordsworth's apparently dreary characters . In " Simon Lee , " the history of physical decay is explicit . Like many of ...
... weakness . With mental power developed , the reader can then perceive echoes of the visionary in many of Wordsworth's apparently dreary characters . In " Simon Lee , " the history of physical decay is explicit . Like many of ...
Andre utgaver - Vis alle
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
able action active affections allows apparent argues arises attention audience become Book characters child childhood clear create crit critics death desire discussion earlier early echoes edition elements elicit evidence Excursion expectation experience external face faculty fancy feelings final finds follows force gradual heart hill hope human imagination important impression individual instance kind knowledge lack later leads lines live look mental mind moon moral moved narrative narrator Nature never object passion passive perceiver perception physical pleasure poem Poet Poet's poetic poetry possible Prelude present Press principle produce reader reading recognizes reflection relation requires response result reveals rock scene seems seen sense shape similar Solitary Solitary's soul spiritual stresses structure sublime suffering suggests surprise tale things thought tion transform truth University vision visionary Wanderer Wanderer's weakness Wordsworth worth