British Literature: From Blake to the present day, edited by H. Spencer, W.E. Houghton, and H. BarrowsHeath, 1951 |
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Стр. 545
... truth ought to pass , and always passes successfully , legal penalties being , in the end , powerless against truth , though sometimes benefi- cially effective against mischievous errors . This is a form of the argument for religious ...
... truth ought to pass , and always passes successfully , legal penalties being , in the end , powerless against truth , though sometimes benefi- cially effective against mischievous errors . This is a form of the argument for religious ...
Стр. 573
... Truth in the most perfect possible harmony . If it were possible for art to give all the truths of nature , it ought to do it . But this is not possible . Choices must always be made of some facts which can be represented , from among ...
... Truth in the most perfect possible harmony . If it were possible for art to give all the truths of nature , it ought to do it . But this is not possible . Choices must always be made of some facts which can be represented , from among ...
Стр. 574
... truth , weight of truth , unity of truth , and courageous assertion of truth ; but which have all their correlative errors and mockeries , almost universally mistaken for them , the breadth which has no contents , the weight which has ...
... truth , weight of truth , unity of truth , and courageous assertion of truth ; but which have all their correlative errors and mockeries , almost universally mistaken for them , the breadth which has no contents , the weight which has ...
Содержание
INTRODUCTION | 6 |
WILLIAM BLAKE | 15 |
POEMS FROM MANUSCRIPTS | 21 |
Авторские права | |
Не показаны другие разделы: 29
Часто встречающиеся слова и выражения
ancient Anglo-Catholic beauty better breath Byron called Carlyle century character Christ's Hospital Christianity Church Church of England Coleridge dead death delight divine dream earth England English essay evil eyes father fear feel French Revolution Grasmere Greece Greek hand happy hath heart Heaven hero hope human imagination intellectual JOHN KEATS Keats knowledge lady Lamb less liberal light literature living look Lyrical Ballads Macbeth mankind means ment mind moral nature Nether Stowey never night o'er object once opinion pain Paradise Lost passion persons philosophy Plato pleasure poem poet poetic poetry political reason religion Romantic Sartor Resartus seemed sense Shelley sleep society song soul Southey speak spirit sweet thee things thou thought Tintern Abbey truth Victorian Whig whole wild wind words Wordsworth write young youth ΙΟ