The imagery of Keats and ShelleyArchon Books, 1962 - 296 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 30
Página 142
... beauty . " When this attribution of our modes of life to visible shapes and this revival of past experience is such as to be favourable to our existence and in so far pleasurable we welcome the form thus animated by ourselves as ...
... beauty . " When this attribution of our modes of life to visible shapes and this revival of past experience is such as to be favourable to our existence and in so far pleasurable we welcome the form thus animated by ourselves as ...
Página 187
... beauty is a necessary condition of his love : Why may I not speak of your Beauty , since without that I could never have lov'd you . I cannot conceive any beginning of such love as I have for you but Beauty . There may be a sort of love ...
... beauty is a necessary condition of his love : Why may I not speak of your Beauty , since without that I could never have lov'd you . I cannot conceive any beginning of such love as I have for you but Beauty . There may be a sort of love ...
Página 220
... Beauty themselves embody the unseen ; Beauty is As summer winds that creep from flower to flower ; Like moonbeams that behind some piny mountain shower . This Beauty becomes visible only through its effects upon perceptible objects ...
... Beauty themselves embody the unseen ; Beauty is As summer winds that creep from flower to flower ; Like moonbeams that behind some piny mountain shower . This Beauty becomes visible only through its effects upon perceptible objects ...
Índice
Poetic Imagery | 3 |
Imagery of Sensation | 26 |
Synaesthetic Imagery ΙΟΙ | 101 |
Página de créditos | |
Otras 1 secciones no se muestran.
Otras ediciones - Ver todo
Términos y frases comunes
abstract actuality aesthetic Agnes Alastor Beauty body Brooks characteristic clouds cold color complex concept concrete Criticism dome earth effect elements Eliot emotion empathy Endymion Essays eternal Eve of St example experience expression feeling figures flowers fused fusion Grecian Urn Heaven Hulme human Hyperion I. A. Richards Ibid imagination intense John Crowe Ransom John Keats Keats's poetry kinesthetic Lamia light lines Literary meaning metaphor metaphysical mind motion motor nature Nightingale object Ode on Indolence Ode on Melancholy Ode to Psyche odor organic passage perceptions Percy Bysshe Shelley physical poem poet poetic imagery Prometheus Unbound prose Queen Mab Ransom reader relationship rich Romantic Romantic poetry Romanticism scene sensation sense sensory sensuous shapes Shelley Shelley's poetry soft soul sound spirit stanza Stood Tiptoe suggestion sweet symbols synaesthesia synaesthetic synaesthetic imagery Tate theory things thou thought tion unity veil verse visual words