Romantic Reassessment, Volumes 106-107Institut für Englische Sprache und Literatur, Universität Salzburg., 1982 |
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Page 51
... language , which Byron complains of , is no more than another manifestation popping up of the paradox that art is true ( after its own fashion ) but is not life . Earlier we remarked that Byron understands the impossibility of accurate ...
... language , which Byron complains of , is no more than another manifestation popping up of the paradox that art is true ( after its own fashion ) but is not life . Earlier we remarked that Byron understands the impossibility of accurate ...
Page 335
... language for recording experi- ments and demonstrations . Thus language would be used to a practical purpose and automatically the idle love of words for their own sake would give place to a deliberate and thoughtful search for words ...
... language for recording experi- ments and demonstrations . Thus language would be used to a practical purpose and automatically the idle love of words for their own sake would give place to a deliberate and thoughtful search for words ...
Page 337
... language . seemed as if there were to be no end of innovation in the language . The state of affairs continued till Swift took it up to bring stability . The corrective applied by Swift showed his interest in the English language . In ...
... language . seemed as if there were to be no end of innovation in the language . The state of affairs continued till Swift took it up to bring stability . The corrective applied by Swift showed his interest in the English language . In ...
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American beauty become believed Burke's Byron called cause character common continued criticism death described discover earth Edmund Burke eighteenth century England English essay eternal existence experience expression fact fall feelings figures France French give hand Hastings human Ibid ideas important India interest Juan knowledge language less letter light literary literature living London Lord man's manners matter means metaphor mind moral narrator nature never opinion pamphlets paragraph passage passion perhaps person play poem poet poetic poetry political praise present principles prose question quoted reason Reflections reform regarded rhyme says sense sentence social society sort soul speech spirit style things thought true truth turn whole writing wrote