The Romantics Reviewed: Contemporary Reviews of British Romantic Writers. Part C: Shelley, Keats and London Radical Writers - Volume IIFirst published in 1972, this volume contains contemporary British periodical reviews of Shelley, Keats and London Radical Writers, including William Godwin, Leigh Hunt and Mary Shelley, in publications from Gentleman’s Magazine to the Theological Inquirer. Introductions to each periodical provide brief sketches of each publication as well as names, dates and bibliographical information. Headnotes offer bibliographical data of the reviews and suggested approaches to studying them. This book will be of interest to those studying the Romantics and English literature. |
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Page 461
... in tbat mighty birth , " Alas ! not there ; I cannot bear Which many a poet and a sage The murmur of tbis Lake to hear . Has aye foreseen , -- the happy age A sound from thee , Rosalind dear , When truth and love sball dwell below .
... in tbat mighty birth , " Alas ! not there ; I cannot bear Which many a poet and a sage The murmur of tbis Lake to hear . Has aye foreseen , -- the happy age A sound from thee , Rosalind dear , When truth and love sball dwell below .
Page 469
But , putting on a serious look , she continued , " when you read such poetry you may say , as the college lad expressed himself , by u happy blunder , I read six hours a day and no one is the wiser . " I acknowledged the justness of ...
But , putting on a serious look , she continued , " when you read such poetry you may say , as the college lad expressed himself , by u happy blunder , I read six hours a day and no one is the wiser . " I acknowledged the justness of ...
Page 470
However the inuy burc durcle upon the poirer whicha Mr. Keats thites possui of setting us to think , we cannot pass orer the equully happy influence with which he ways as to laughter . We think that our language cannot furnish way ...
However the inuy burc durcle upon the poirer whicha Mr. Keats thites possui of setting us to think , we cannot pass orer the equully happy influence with which he ways as to laughter . We think that our language cannot furnish way ...
Page 472
It is the enormity that proves the case , happy patient is insane with self - will and with the fury of being opposed ; and he will do the worst and most horrible things , precisely because he , as well as others , knows them to be the ...
It is the enormity that proves the case , happy patient is insane with self - will and with the fury of being opposed ; and he will do the worst and most horrible things , precisely because he , as well as others , knows them to be the ...
Page 478
The linc of esclamations in the previous extract is in the taste of the Greek dramatists ; from whom Mr. Shelley , who is a scholar , has caught also his happy feeling for compounds , such as " the all - communicating air ...
The linc of esclamations in the previous extract is in the taste of the Greek dramatists ; from whom Mr. Shelley , who is a scholar , has caught also his happy feeling for compounds , such as " the all - communicating air ...
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The Romantics Reviewed: Contemporary Reviews of British Romantic ..., Volume 2 Donald H. Reiman No preview available - 2017 |
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