Byron, the PoetV. Gollancz, 1964 - 352 sider |
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Side 20
... give full scope to my inclination , and be either droll or pathetic , descriptive or sentimental , tender or satirical , as the humour strikes me ; for , if I mistake not , the manner which I have adopted admits equally of all these ...
... give full scope to my inclination , and be either droll or pathetic , descriptive or sentimental , tender or satirical , as the humour strikes me ; for , if I mistake not , the manner which I have adopted admits equally of all these ...
Side 124
... gives his answer to the question which Cuvier asked at the beginning of his Essay on the Theory of the Earth : Genius and science have burst the limits of space , and a few observations , explained by just reasoning , have unveiled the ...
... gives his answer to the question which Cuvier asked at the beginning of his Essay on the Theory of the Earth : Genius and science have burst the limits of space , and a few observations , explained by just reasoning , have unveiled the ...
Side 326
... give the great commonplaces a univer- sal significance , he can accept the ambiguity and mutability of things with humorous calm . 4. Art and Life One feels that he is a man of action made writer by accident , and that , in an age when ...
... give the great commonplaces a univer- sal significance , he can accept the ambiguity and mutability of things with humorous calm . 4. Art and Life One feels that he is a man of action made writer by accident , and that , in an age when ...
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action actual allows already appears becomes beginning Byron cant Canto character Childe Harold comic common complete contrast death described digression Don Juan earlier early effect element English epic episode example experience fact fall feeling figure followed give Haidée hero human imagination Italy Juan's kind Lady later least less Letters live look Lord manner material means mind Moore moral Murray narrative narrator nature never ocean once original passage passion perhaps play poem poet Poetry political Pope possible present reference reflection relation remains romantic ruin satire scene seems seen sense society soul spirit stanzas story style theme things thought tion tradition true turn whole writing written