Selected ProseHarvard University Press, 1966 - 493 Seiten No detailed description available for "Selected Prose". |
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Seite 100
... poets do ; -to clothe his poetry with a grand intellectual light , —and to lay his name in the lap of immortality . Our readers will think that we are speaking too highly of this young poet , - but luckily we have the power of making ...
... poets do ; -to clothe his poetry with a grand intellectual light , —and to lay his name in the lap of immortality . Our readers will think that we are speaking too highly of this young poet , - but luckily we have the power of making ...
Seite 207
... poetry of Shakespeare is generally free as is the wind ; — a perfect thing of the elements : -winged and sweetly coloured . Poetry must be free ! It is of the air , not of the earth , -and the higher it soars , the nearer it gets to its ...
... poetry of Shakespeare is generally free as is the wind ; — a perfect thing of the elements : -winged and sweetly coloured . Poetry must be free ! It is of the air , not of the earth , -and the higher it soars , the nearer it gets to its ...
Seite 398
... poetry of the head and the poetry of the heart , which until within a very few years , were so much be - praised and followed , have gone a little into decay ; and those volatile wenches , the Muses , have flown , like the rheumatism or ...
... poetry of the head and the poetry of the heart , which until within a very few years , were so much be - praised and followed , have gone a little into decay ; and those volatile wenches , the Muses , have flown , like the rheumatism or ...
Inhalt
Introduction I | 1 |
Note on the Editing | 22 |
Dramatic Reviews from The Champion | 127 |
Urheberrecht | |
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admirable appears Athenaeum beautiful Ben Jonson Champion character Chaucer cock Coleridge comedy comic Coriolanus Covent Garden Theatre critic dancing December delight Drama dream Drury Lane Theatre Edward Herbert English essay eyes Falstaff fame fancy feeling genius gentle gentleman give Hamlet hand Hazlitt heart humour Ibid imagination John Hamilton Reynolds Kean Keats's Kemble Lady Lectures Letters of Keats literary living London Magazine look Lord Byron melancholy Milton mind Miss O'Neill Morton nature never Othello passage passion perfect person Peter Peter Bell play pleasure poem poet poetical poetry prose readers remarks reprinted romantic satire scene Scots Magazine seems Shakespeare Signed J.H.R. Sonnet sorrow speak spirit sport sweet taste theatrical thing Thomas Thomas Hood thou thought Tom Morton tragedy verse voice William Hazlitt wonder Wordsworth write wrote Yellow Dwarf young youth