The Self as Mind: Vision and Identity in Wordsworth, Coleridge, and KeatsHarvard University Press, 1986 - 286 sider |
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Side 68
... poet's role as a writer in favor of the poet's role as a sensibility . The major points made here are anticipated by Gray . Thus , Gray's " mute , inglorious Milton " would qualify , in Words- worth's definition , as a poet , and so ...
... poet's role as a writer in favor of the poet's role as a sensibility . The major points made here are anticipated by Gray . Thus , Gray's " mute , inglorious Milton " would qualify , in Words- worth's definition , as a poet , and so ...
Side 114
... poet's formative speech or logos , the poems represent the poet's attempt to create , or re - create anew , the world his implied auditors are imagined as inhabiting . On the other hand , as semidramatic monologues apparently addressed ...
... poet's formative speech or logos , the poems represent the poet's attempt to create , or re - create anew , the world his implied auditors are imagined as inhabiting . On the other hand , as semidramatic monologues apparently addressed ...
Side 131
... poet's mind and , by exten- sion , reinforces our sense of the poet's finite embodiment . This sense of the bird's exteriority is enhanced by the poet's presumption that Charles too sees and hears the rook , that continuity of ...
... poet's mind and , by exten- sion , reinforces our sense of the poet's finite embodiment . This sense of the bird's exteriority is enhanced by the poet's presumption that Charles too sees and hears the rook , that continuity 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 |
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