Essays by Divers Hands: Being the Transactions of the Royal Society of Literature, Band 28 |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 34
Seite 53
... verse . ' For the popular divi- sion into prose and verse ' , he says , ' is inadmissible in accurate philosophy . ' I have no hesitation in agreeing with him , for it is not hard to think of writers whose inspiration was poetic , but ...
... verse . ' For the popular divi- sion into prose and verse ' , he says , ' is inadmissible in accurate philosophy . ' I have no hesitation in agreeing with him , for it is not hard to think of writers whose inspiration was poetic , but ...
Seite 61
... verse ; and a rather less intimate acquaintance with the original language is enough to give an adequate ( though still imperfect ) understanding of their mes- sage . But the case of the poet in verse is unique and almost hope- less in ...
... verse ; and a rather less intimate acquaintance with the original language is enough to give an adequate ( though still imperfect ) understanding of their mes- sage . But the case of the poet in verse is unique and almost hope- less in ...
Seite 77
... verse ) , the young Edward Thomas confined himself to prose . Mr. Eckert says that ' He attempted verse ... and then abandoned it for nearly twenty years . ' But , writing to W. H. Hudson after he had started composing poetry , Thomas ...
... verse ) , the young Edward Thomas confined himself to prose . Mr. Eckert says that ' He attempted verse ... and then abandoned it for nearly twenty years . ' But , writing to W. H. Hudson after he had started composing poetry , Thomas ...
Inhalt
Giff Edmonds Memorial Lecture | 1 |
Tredegar Memorial Lecture | 20 |
TENNYSONS INFLUENCE ON HIS TIMES | 35 |
6 weitere Abschnitte werden nicht angezeigt.
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Admiral ancient artist beautiful Biographia Literaria Bonnerot brother Byron called century certainly Charles Christ Christian Coleridge Coleridge's Contributors criticism death Dostoievsky doubt dream world E. H. W. Meyerstein Editor Edward Thomas element Endymion England English Ernest Hartley Coleridge escape Essex eyes fact feel French Frost garden genius give Gospels Greece Greek heart heaven illusions imagination Jesus John Evelyn John Keats Keats kind King knew Kubla Khan Lady language later legislators Leigh Hunt less letter literary literature lived London looked Lord Luke mean mind miracles Mountjoy nature never Omar Khayyám Penelope Penelope Devereux Penelope's Pepys perhaps picture poem poet poet's poetic poetry prose Queen Rich Roman sense Shelley Shelley's sonnet spirit story Sylva tell Tennyson things Thomas of Celano Thomas's thought tion translation trees unacknowledged verse Victorian Virgin Birth words write wrote young