The Self as Mind: Vision and Identity in Wordsworth, Coleridge, and KeatsHarvard University Press, 1986 - 286 sider |
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Side 57
... describes the soldier walking next to him : " I beheld , / With an astonishment but ill - sup- pressed , / His ghostly figure moving at my side " ( 431-433 ) . Here , as always , Wordsworth shows his genius for choosing the right words ...
... describes the soldier walking next to him : " I beheld , / With an astonishment but ill - sup- pressed , / His ghostly figure moving at my side " ( 431-433 ) . Here , as always , Wordsworth shows his genius for choosing the right words ...
Side 59
... ( 451-453 ) . In this text Wordsworth describes the cottager as " a labourer " who dwells " behind yon wood , " one who , he assures the soldier , " will not mur- mur should we break his rest , / And with Wordsworth 59.
... ( 451-453 ) . In this text Wordsworth describes the cottager as " a labourer " who dwells " behind yon wood , " one who , he assures the soldier , " will not mur- mur should we break his rest , / And with Wordsworth 59.
Side 189
... describes one of those " richer entanglements " Endymion envisioned beyond " fellow- ship with essence , " should be addressed to a lady Keats saw at Vauxhall . The relationship it assumes is nothing if not “ theatrical , ” a thing of ...
... describes one of those " richer entanglements " Endymion envisioned beyond " fellow- ship with essence , " should be addressed to a lady Keats saw at Vauxhall . The relationship it assumes is nothing if not “ theatrical , ” a thing of ...
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The Idea of the Self as Mind | 1 |
Making a Place in the World | 31 |
Speaking Dreams | 100 |
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The Self As Mind: Vision and Identity in Wordsworth, Coleridge, and Keats Charles J. Rzepka Ingen forhåndsvisning tilgjengelig - 2013 |
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
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