| Alexander Gilchrist - 1863 - 460 Seiten
...has the key to Blake's peculiar temperament) not unintelligible avowal : ' Natural ' objects always did, and now do, weaken, deaden, and obliterate '...in nature. Read Michael Angelo's ' Sonnet, Vol. ii. page 179 ' (of this edition). 'No mortal object did these eyes behold When first they met the placid... | |
| Henry Crabb Robinson - 1869 - 574 Seiten
...tho bottom of page 44, " On the Influence of Natural Objects," is written : " Natural objects always did and now do weaken, deaden, and obliterate imagination...nature. Read Michael Angelo's Sonnet, Vol. II. p. 1 79." That is, the one beginning, — " No mortal object did these eyes behold, When first they met... | |
| Henry Crabb Robinson - 1869 - 578 Seiten
...the bottom of page 44, " On the Influence of Natural Objects," is written : " Natural objects always did and now do weaken, deaden, and obliterate imagination...found in nature. Read Michael Angelo's Sonnet, Vol. H. p. l79." That is, the one beginning, — " No mortnl object did these eyes behold, When first they... | |
| Henry Crabb Robinson - 1869 - 544 Seiten
...Imagination the Divine Vision. CHAP. xiii. did and now do weaken, deaden, and obliterate imagi1827. nation in me. Wordsworth must know that what he writes valuable...Sonnet, Vol. II. p. 179." That is, the one beginning — ' ' Xo mortal object did these eyes behold, When first they met the lucid light of thine." It is... | |
| Henry Crabb Robinson - 1870 - 576 Seiten
...the bottom of page 44, " On the Influence of Natural Objects," is written : " Natural objects always did and now do weaken, deaden, and obliterate imagination...what he writes valuable is not to be found in nature. Eead Michael Angelo's Sonnet, Vol. II. p. 179." That is, the one beginning, — " No mortal object... | |
| Alexander Gilchrist - 1880 - 518 Seiten
...unintelligible avowal : ' Natural ' objects always did, and now do, weaken, deaden, and ob' literate imagination in me. Wordsworth must know that ' what...in nature. Read ' Michael Angelo's Sonnet, vol. ii. page 179' (of this edition). 'No mortal object did these eyes behold When first they met the placid... | |
| Arthur Symons - 1907 - 458 Seiten
...P. 44, ' On the Influence of Natural Objects,' at the bottom of the page. ' Natural objects always did and now do weaken, deaden, and obliterate imagination...found in Nature. Read Michael Angelo's sonnet, vol. iv. p. 179.' That is, the one beginning ' No mortal object did these eyes behold When first they met... | |
| Edwin John Ellis - 1907 - 506 Seiten
...poetry. Against the heading On the Influence of Natural Objects he writes — Natural objects always did. and now do, weaken, deaden, and obliterate imagination...what he writes valuable is not to be found in nature. Blake seems at times to forget that there are two moods, each called Nature, and that if Scripture... | |
| Arthur Symons - 1907 - 470 Seiten
...unchanging realities of the imagination. ' Natural objects,' he wrote in a copy of Wordsworth, 'always did and now do weaken, deaden, and obliterate imagination...he writes valuable is not to be found in nature.' And so his poetry is the most abstract of all poetry, although in a sense the most concrete. It is... | |
| Edwin John Ellis - 1907 - 500 Seiten
...poetry. Against the heading On the Influence of Natural Objects he writes — Natural objects always did, and now do, weaken, deaden, and obliterate imagination...what he writes valuable is not to be found in nature. Blake seems at times to forget that there are two moods, each called Nature, and that if Scripture... | |
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