The Self as Mind: Vision and Identity in Wordsworth, Coleridge, and KeatsHarvard University Press, 1986 - 286 sider |
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Side 2
... intense identification with con- sciousness is reinforced by encroaching night , and its immediate ef- fects appear in the poem's opening lines . Darkness , whatever else it may do to suggest the somber mood typical of eighteenth ...
... intense identification with con- sciousness is reinforced by encroaching night , and its immediate ef- fects appear in the poem's opening lines . Darkness , whatever else it may do to suggest the somber mood typical of eighteenth ...
Side 172
... intense identification with some particular object or other . His dis- embodied eye seeks , usually , not so much to revitalize the old world as to substitute new dream - worlds for the old , dream worlds that co- alesce around the ...
... intense identification with some particular object or other . His dis- embodied eye seeks , usually , not so much to revitalize the old world as to substitute new dream - worlds for the old , dream worlds that co- alesce around the ...
Side 230
... intense sen- sations , yet anxious to avoid the pitfalls of Wordsworth's philosophical egotism and " palpable design . ” There was a middle ground , though , what Keats later called , in his letter to George and Georgiana of March 1819 ...
... intense sen- sations , yet anxious to avoid the pitfalls of Wordsworth's philosophical egotism and " palpable design . ” There was a middle ground , though , what Keats later called , in his letter to George and Georgiana of March 1819 ...
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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 |
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