The Romantics Reviewed: Contemporary Reviews of British Romantic Writers, Part 1, Volume 1Donald H. Reiman Garland Pub., 1972 - English periodicals |
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Page 40
... means the worst →→ but we will begin fairly : MR . WORDSWORTH , in those poems and leave the flower untarnished and fair . But which he is here pleased to call xer'ığıxw , by we now apprehend that this nurse , at the time way of pre ...
... means the worst →→ but we will begin fairly : MR . WORDSWORTH , in those poems and leave the flower untarnished and fair . But which he is here pleased to call xer'ığıxw , by we now apprehend that this nurse , at the time way of pre ...
Page 92
... means of splendid objects and ex- traordinary events , and that other species which founds its charm upon the exhibition of the relations which sentiments and emotions bear to each other within the human mind . In the first species ...
... means of splendid objects and ex- traordinary events , and that other species which founds its charm upon the exhibition of the relations which sentiments and emotions bear to each other within the human mind . In the first species ...
Page 132
... means ; by tracing the maternal paffion through many of its more fubtle windings , as in the Poems of the Ideot Boy and the Mad Mother ; by accompanying the laft ftruggles of a human being at the approach of death , cleaving in folitude ...
... means ; by tracing the maternal paffion through many of its more fubtle windings , as in the Poems of the Ideot Boy and the Mad Mother ; by accompanying the laft ftruggles of a human being at the approach of death , cleaving in folitude ...
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The Romantics Reviewed: Contemporary Reviews of British Romantic Writers Donald Reiman Limited preview - 2022 |
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admiration Alvar appear beautiful beneath Biographia Literaria Blackwood's BLACKWOOD'S EDINBURGH MAGAZINE breath bright British Critic brother Burns Byron character Charles Lamb Christabel Coleridge Coleridge's delight doth dreams earth Edinburgh Edinburgh Review Emily Excursion fair fancy father fear feeling fome genius give ground happy hath hear heart heaven human imagination Kubla Khan lady Lake Lake Poets language literary living look Lord Lord Byron Lyrical Ballads Magazine merit mind moral mountains nature never night o'er opinion Ordonio perhaps Peter Bell pleasure poet poetical poetry praise racter readers Remorse Robert Southey rock Rylstone S. T. Coleridge seems shew solitary soul Southey speak spirit tale taste thee thing thou thought tion truth verse voice volume Waggoner wanderer White Doe wild William Wordsworth words Wordsworth Wordsworth's Poems Wordsworth's River Duddon writings