 | Virgil - 2002 - 404 pagina’s
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 | G. Wilson Knight - 2002 - 396 pagina’s
...challenging essay Shakespeare's Sonnets Dated, which followed Samuel Butler in arguing that Sonnet 107 Not mine own fears, nor the prophetic soul Of the wide world dreaming on things to come referred not to some event of the 1590*5 or the accession of James I in 1603, but to the defeat of... | |
 | Samuel Taylor Coleridge - 2002 - 296 pagina’s
...Clay banks were furr'd with mouldly moss Broad-breasted Pollards, with broad-branching head. " — the prophetic soul Of the wide world dreaming on things to come. Shak[espeare's] sonnets. Most true it is, that I have look'd on truth Askance & strangely. Id. 63 Behind... | |
 | George Wilson Knight - 2002 - 416 pagina’s
...And the comparison honours Shakespeare too; for, even when we have granted that, for one writing from 'the prophetic soul of the wide world dreaming on things to come' (Sonnet 107), it may have fallen well within the scope of Shakespeare's genius to envisage his great... | |
 | G. Wilson Knight - 2002 - 256 pagina’s
...Notes, 20 1 -6). But even so, the balance tilts the other way; personal 'fears' are overweighted by 'the prophetic soul of the wide world dreaming on things to come'. This I take to refer either directly or through some sort of analogy to world-affairs. In his Literary... | |
 | Alfred Dodd - 2003 - 308 pagina’s
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