Tennyson LaureateBarrie and Rockliff, 1962 - 292 páginas |
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Página 227
... Ancient Sage speaks plain without symbol or evocation : The days and hours are ever glancing by , And seem to flicker past thro ' sun and shade , Or short , or long , as Pleasure leads , or Pain ; But with the Nameless ... Ancient Sage 227.
... Ancient Sage speaks plain without symbol or evocation : The days and hours are ever glancing by , And seem to flicker past thro ' sun and shade , Or short , or long , as Pleasure leads , or Pain ; But with the Nameless ... Ancient Sage 227.
Página 237
... Ancient Sage's reply to him appears as a refusal to face the point at issue : nothing worthy proving can be proven , Nor yet disproven : wherefore be ... Ancient Sage attempts to alter his companion's vision of things The Ancient Sage 237.
... Ancient Sage's reply to him appears as a refusal to face the point at issue : nothing worthy proving can be proven , Nor yet disproven : wherefore be ... Ancient Sage attempts to alter his companion's vision of things The Ancient Sage 237.
Página 239
... Sage's answer to this sad aestheticism is significant : If thou would'st hear the Nameless , and wilt dive Into the Temple - cave of thine own self , There , brooding by the central altar , thou May'st haply learn the ... Ancient Sage 239.
... Sage's answer to this sad aestheticism is significant : If thou would'st hear the Nameless , and wilt dive Into the Temple - cave of thine own self , There , brooding by the central altar , thou May'st haply learn the ... Ancient Sage 239.
Índice
Chapter II | 19 |
Chapter III | 47 |
Chapter IV | 78 |
Página de créditos | |
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Términos y frases comunes
Alfred Tennyson Ancient Sage Arthur Arthur Hallam awareness beauty bereavement Cambridge Carlyle certainly common criticism dark deep described doubt dream Early Poems emotional Enoch Arden Enone evocation experience expression F. D. Maurice fact faith feeling friends grief Guinevere Hallam Tennyson Hallam's death heart Hesperides human Idylls imagination kind King Lady of Shalott Laureate Locksley Hall Locksley Hall Sixty Lucretius Maud means Memoir Memoriam metrical mood moral move movement natural normal Palace of Art period poem poet poetic poetry political present Princess problem Queen realise reality recognised relationship reveals rhythm romantic says sense shadow significance Simeon Simeon Stylites sleep social society Somersby song sorrow soul stars story suggest symbol Tennyson's mind Tennysonian thee theme things thou thro tion Tithonus Trinity manuscript Ulysses Usher Art Gallery verse Victorian vision voice words Wordsworth writing