The Questioning Presence: Wordsworth, Keats, and the Interrogative Mode in Romantic PoetryCornell University Press, 1986 - 392 Seiten |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 82
Seite 25
... mystery , to explore regions where familiar paths of understanding are blocked . Mystery itself derives from a Greek root meaning " closed " ( referring to the closed eyes or lips of those initiated into religious mysteries ) . This ...
... mystery , to explore regions where familiar paths of understanding are blocked . Mystery itself derives from a Greek root meaning " closed " ( referring to the closed eyes or lips of those initiated into religious mysteries ) . This ...
Seite 26
... mystery . " 11 What Is a " Question " ? The ultimate register of mystery is in language , in the deformation of those " cosmic syntaxes " that Wasserman sees as the hallmark of Neoclassical , as opposed to Romantic , poetry . Confidence ...
... mystery . " 11 What Is a " Question " ? The ultimate register of mystery is in language , in the deformation of those " cosmic syntaxes " that Wasserman sees as the hallmark of Neoclassical , as opposed to Romantic , poetry . Confidence ...
Seite 199
... mystery Keats ponders as he reads Wordsworth and Shakespeare suggest two different speculative modes and two sorts of interrogative capacity . The " Mystery " of Shake- speare's life does not enter the manifest content of his works ...
... mystery Keats ponders as he reads Wordsworth and Shakespeare suggest two different speculative modes and two sorts of interrogative capacity . The " Mystery " of Shake- speare's life does not enter the manifest content of his works ...
Inhalt
Editions | 11 |
English Romanticism and the Interrogative | 17 |
The Reader Questioned in Lyrical Ballads 1800 | 71 |
Urheberrecht | |
12 weitere Abschnitte werden nicht angezeigt.
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
ambiguous answer argument asks Author autobiography Book character Coleridge confesses critical dark passages dramatic dream dreamer echo effect emerges Endymion Ernest de Selincourt Eve of St Excursion fact Fall of Hyperion feeling figure haunt Hazlitt heart human idiom imagination inquiry interrogative mode irony Isabella John Keats Keats the Poet Keats writes Keats's Keats's narrator Lamia language lines Lycius Lyrical Ballads M. H. Abrams Martha Ray Milton mind Moneta mystery narrative narrator's nature Ode to Psyche old Romance Paradise Lost passion perplexed phrase play pleasure poem poem's poet's poetic poetry Porphyro Preface Prelude present Psyche ques reader reading rhetorical rhyme Romantic poetry seems sense silent Solitary song sonnet soul speaker Sperry spirit stanza Stillinger story suggests surmise syntax tale tell thee things Thorn thou thought Tintern Abbey tion Titans tone turn verse vision voice Wanderer Wanderer's words Wordsworth Wordsworthian