Wordsworth: Romantic Poetry and Revolution PoliticsManchester University Press, 1989 - 203 pagina's |
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Pagina 20
... passage by Beattie , however , is Wordsworth's obsession with an identifiable , real landscape . By the end of the passage from The Minstrel , Beattie has placed us in a landscape of ' glittering waves , and skies in gold arrayed ...
... passage by Beattie , however , is Wordsworth's obsession with an identifiable , real landscape . By the end of the passage from The Minstrel , Beattie has placed us in a landscape of ' glittering waves , and skies in gold arrayed ...
Pagina 120
... passage of time , ' Nature ' in its physical manifestations was accorded a primary role in his mind ; she was ' sought / For her own sake ' , and not allowed to impart her teachings unhindered . The passage then reverts to the familiar ...
... passage of time , ' Nature ' in its physical manifestations was accorded a primary role in his mind ; she was ' sought / For her own sake ' , and not allowed to impart her teachings unhindered . The passage then reverts to the familiar ...
Pagina 166
... passage is to be fully understood in the light of the way roads and tracks become regular points of reference in Books XI and XII . We remember the two roads the poet watched through the mist when waiting to go home from school ( 434 ...
... passage is to be fully understood in the light of the way roads and tracks become regular points of reference in Books XI and XII . We remember the two roads the poet watched through the mist when waiting to go home from school ( 434 ...
Inhoudsopgave
Wordsworth and pastoral politics | 1 |
the pastoral tradition in early Wordsworth | 19 |
Poetry of alienated radicalism | 69 |
Copyright | |
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