Major British Poets of the Romantic PeriodWilliam Webster Heath Macmillan, 1973 - 1140 Seiten Each chapter contains biography and timeline of the writer's life and divides works into poetry and prose. |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 79
Seite 774
... Wind moves from being passive , then active , finally imperative as the west wind is incorporated within him . Similarly the reader is expected to be incorporated within and moved by the language of the poem in a context where words ...
... Wind moves from being passive , then active , finally imperative as the west wind is incorporated within him . Similarly the reader is expected to be incorporated within and moved by the language of the poem in a context where words ...
Seite 903
... WIND * I 100 110 120 [ 1839 ] A wide contagious atmosphere , Creeping like cold through all things near ; A power to infect and to infest . His servant - maids and dogs grew dull ; His ... WIND [ 903 Ode to the West Wind Epipsychidion 944.
... WIND * I 100 110 120 [ 1839 ] A wide contagious atmosphere , Creeping like cold through all things near ; A power to infect and to infest . His servant - maids and dogs grew dull ; His ... WIND [ 903 Ode to the West Wind Epipsychidion 944.
Seite 909
... wind passed ; Their whistling noise made the birds aghast . And the gusty winds waked the winged seeds , Out of their birthplace of ugly weeds , Till they clung round many a sweet flower's stem , 40 Which rotted into the earth with them ...
... wind passed ; Their whistling noise made the birds aghast . And the gusty winds waked the winged seeds , Out of their birthplace of ugly weeds , Till they clung round many a sweet flower's stem , 40 Which rotted into the earth with them ...
Inhalt
Preface | 2 |
Letters | 5 |
Visions of the Daughters of Albion | 10 |
Urheberrecht | |
43 weitere Abschnitte werden nicht angezeigt.
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Albion beauty behold beneath Blake Blake's breast breath bright Bromion Byron child clouds Coleridge dark dead dear death deep delight Dorothy Wordsworth doth dream earth Enion Eternal eyes fair father fear feel Felpham fire flowers gentle Grasmere grave hand happy hath hear heard heart heaven hills hope hour human Jerusalem Lady light live look loud Luvah Lyrical Ballads mighty Milton mind moon morning mountains nature never night o'er Oothoon pain Palamabron passion Peter Bell pity pleasure poem Poet poetry Rintrah rock round S. T. Coleridge Satan sight silent sleep smile song sorrow soul sound Spectre spirit stars stood sweet tears Tharmas thee Theotormon thine things thou thought thro trees trembling truth Twas Urizen Urthona Vala vale voice weep wild William Blake wind words Wordsworth youth ΙΟ