The Quarterly Review, Volume 11William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, Sir William Smith, Rowland Edmund Prothero Baron Ernle, George Walter Prothero John Murray, 1814 |
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Page 21
... never know , I will not say of mirth But of repose , an hour , When Phœbus leaves , and stars salute the earth . Yon shepherd , when the mighty star of day He sees descending to his western bed , And the wide orient all with shade ...
... never know , I will not say of mirth But of repose , an hour , When Phœbus leaves , and stars salute the earth . Yon shepherd , when the mighty star of day He sees descending to his western bed , And the wide orient all with shade ...
Page 27
... never seems to have meddled , and the third romantic fami- ly , that of Amadis , which had the honour of contributing to it some of its later ornaments , would , if we had time for it , require distinct consideration . 6 The Magnanimous ...
... never seems to have meddled , and the third romantic fami- ly , that of Amadis , which had the honour of contributing to it some of its later ornaments , would , if we had time for it , require distinct consideration . 6 The Magnanimous ...
Page 30
... never be made from the one to the other : it even constitutes a remarkable characteristic of this description of poetry that it is impossible to derive from it any sort of instruction . Yet we may find a peculiar species of enjoyment ...
... never be made from the one to the other : it even constitutes a remarkable characteristic of this description of poetry that it is impossible to derive from it any sort of instruction . Yet we may find a peculiar species of enjoyment ...
Page 31
... never supports himself at the elevation of epic poetry . He even seeks the grace of facility in negligence . Often he begins a new stanza by repeating some of the phrases with which he finished the preceding , as in story - telling we ...
... never supports himself at the elevation of epic poetry . He even seeks the grace of facility in negligence . Often he begins a new stanza by repeating some of the phrases with which he finished the preceding , as in story - telling we ...
Page 34
... never says a word till the ill - starred nuptials have taken place , wher she suddenly becomes so giddy and garrulous ' that she can talk of nothing else and ( what exceedingly increases the interest ) mean- ing , and indeed suspecting ...
... never says a word till the ill - starred nuptials have taken place , wher she suddenly becomes so giddy and garrulous ' that she can talk of nothing else and ( what exceedingly increases the interest ) mean- ing , and indeed suspecting ...
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