English Romantic WritersDavid Perkins Harcourt, Brace & World, 1967 - 1265 pages ENGLISH ROMANTIC WRITERS offers selections from authors who have traditionally held a large place in our consciousness of English Romanticism, but it also includes other figures--especially women--who have been less emphasized in the past. The intellectual discourses of the age concerning governance, politics, the impact of the French Revolution, gender and the status of women, the nature of nature and of human psychology, and the theory of literature and art are represented in the prose and poetry of writers like Wordsworth, Coleridge, the Shelleys, and Keats. |
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Page 137
... leave not your Father as your brethren left me ! Twelve Sons successive fled away in that thousand years of sorrow 26 Of Palamabron's Harrow & of Rintrah's wrath & fury : Reuben & Manazzoth & Gad & Simeon & Levi And Ephraim & Judah were ...
... leave not your Father as your brethren left me ! Twelve Sons successive fled away in that thousand years of sorrow 26 Of Palamabron's Harrow & of Rintrah's wrath & fury : Reuben & Manazzoth & Gad & Simeon & Levi And Ephraim & Judah were ...
Page 1058
... leave , if nought so bright may live , All earth can take or Heaven can give . Saturn and Love their long repose ... Leave thee naked to laughter , When leaves fall and cold winds come . 20 30 1822 ( 1824 ) LINES : " WHEN THE LAMP IS ...
... leave , if nought so bright may live , All earth can take or Heaven can give . Saturn and Love their long repose ... Leave thee naked to laughter , When leaves fall and cold winds come . 20 30 1822 ( 1824 ) LINES : " WHEN THE LAMP IS ...
Page 1170
... leave them , Muse ! O leave them to their woes ; For thou art weak to sing such tumults dire : A solitary sorrow best befits Thy lips , and antheming a lonely grief . Leave them , O Muse ! for thou anon wilt find Many a fallen old ...
... leave them , Muse ! O leave them to their woes ; For thou art weak to sing such tumults dire : A solitary sorrow best befits Thy lips , and antheming a lonely grief . Leave them , O Muse ! for thou anon wilt find Many a fallen old ...
Contents
GENERAL INTRODUCTION | 1 |
GEORGE CRABBE | 25 |
WILLIAM BLAKE | 37 |
Copyright | |
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Albion ancient beauty behold beneath Biographia Literaria Blake Blake's Book of Urizen bright called character clouds Coleridge Coleridge's dark dear death deep delight divine dream earth Enion EPICTETUS Eternal fancy father fear feelings fire Four Zoas Fuzon genius Grasmere hand happy hath heard heart heaven hills hope human images imagination immortal language light live look loud Luvah Lyrical Ballads Milton mind moral morning mountains nature never night o'er objects pain Palamabron Paradise Lost passion pleasure poem poet poetic poetry poor prose Rahab reader Rintrah rocks Romantic round Satan sense Shakspeare sight silent sleep song Songs of Experience soul sound spirit stood sweet tears Tharmas thee things thou thought thro tion trees truth Urizen Urthona vale verse vision voice walk weep wild William Wordsworth wind words Wordsworth write youth ΙΟ