Prose of the Romantic PeriodCarl Woodring Houghton Mifflin, 1961 - 600 pages Prose excerpts from the works of William Wordsworth, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Walter Savage Landor, Charles Lamb, William Hazlitt, Leigh Hunt, Thomas de Quincey, Lord Byron, Percy Bysshe Shelley, John Keats, and others. |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 86
Page 32
... called it " a most lively and readable sketch , giving a brilliant impression of life in early nineteenth - century England . " Simmons published an annotated edi- tion in 1951. The first half of Letter 39 is given below from the Second ...
... called it " a most lively and readable sketch , giving a brilliant impression of life in early nineteenth - century England . " Simmons published an annotated edi- tion in 1951. The first half of Letter 39 is given below from the Second ...
Page 43
... called Ashby , got to another at the foot of a hill , which , they say , forms part of the Wolds ; that is , a ridge of hills . This second village is called Scamblesby . The vale in which it lies is very fine land . A hazel mould ...
... called Ashby , got to another at the foot of a hill , which , they say , forms part of the Wolds ; that is , a ridge of hills . This second village is called Scamblesby . The vale in which it lies is very fine land . A hazel mould ...
Page 152
... called out of the world , that is , in reference to the especial ends and purposes of that communion ; this other might more expressively have been entitled enclesia , or an order of men chosen in and of the realm , and consti- tuting ...
... called out of the world , that is , in reference to the especial ends and purposes of that communion ; this other might more expressively have been entitled enclesia , or an order of men chosen in and of the realm , and consti- tuting ...
Contents
JEREMY BENTHAM | 4 |
THOMAS PAINE | 11 |
THOMAS ROBERT MALTHUS | 20 |
Copyright | |
41 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
admiration Aeneid Æschylus appeared Archdeacon Hare beautiful Boccaccio called character Coleridge common criticism death delight dramatic dreams E. V. Lucas edition effect English Epictetus essay expression faculty fancy feeling genius give Godiva Hamlet Hazlitt heart heaven human idea images imagination impressions John John Keats Keats King Lear lady Lamb Landor language Leigh Hunt Leofric less letters light living London look Lyrical Ballads Macbeth manner means Milton mind moral nature never night objects observed Othello pain Paradise Lost passion perfect perhaps person philosophical play pleasure poem poet poetical poetry present principle produced prose reader reason Romantic Romeo and Juliet scene seems sense sentiment Shakespeare society soul spirit style taste thee thing thou thought Tiberius tion truth verse Walter Landor whole words Wordsworth write