The Rise of Romanticism: Essential TextsCarcanet New Press, 1978 - 363 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 31
Page 48
... concept of emotion seem curiously stilted . Similarly , he offers a distinction between ' ordinary passion ' and ' enthusiasms ' mildly suggestive of Burke's ' Sublime ' ( see pp . 195-206 ) ' not clearly comprehended by him who feels ...
... concept of emotion seem curiously stilted . Similarly , he offers a distinction between ' ordinary passion ' and ' enthusiasms ' mildly suggestive of Burke's ' Sublime ' ( see pp . 195-206 ) ' not clearly comprehended by him who feels ...
Page 139
... concepts of finiteness and externality from his own infinite imagination , is central to Berkeley's philosophy and , of course , to Coleridge's concept of the imagination in Chapter XIII of the Biographia Literaria . In a crucial ...
... concepts of finiteness and externality from his own infinite imagination , is central to Berkeley's philosophy and , of course , to Coleridge's concept of the imagination in Chapter XIII of the Biographia Literaria . In a crucial ...
Page 250
... concept of ' oriental primitivism ' broader than this . The central concept in Lowth is of the ' new - created mind ( undepraved by habit or opinion ) ' ( Lecture 1 ) . Here , of course , we find a concept of timelessness as in Berkeley ...
... concept of ' oriental primitivism ' broader than this . The central concept in Lowth is of the ' new - created mind ( undepraved by habit or opinion ) ' ( Lecture 1 ) . Here , of course , we find a concept of timelessness as in Berkeley ...
Common terms and phrases
abstract admiration Aeneid ancient appear association beauty Berkeley Biographia Literaria Blake Blake's body Book of Urizen cause character classical colour composition concept connexion consider distance distinct duration Earth effect eighteenth century epistemology Essay eternal example existence extension Ezekiel Faery Queen fancy feeling finite genius Gothic Hartley hath heaven Hebrew Homer human imitation impressions infinite Joseph Warton kind language Lowth manner Maurice Morgann medullary substance memory mind motion mountains nature never Night Thoughts o'er objects obscure observed oriental original Ossian particular passions perceived perception perhaps philosophers pleasure poem poet poetical poetry Pope Pope's principle prophet proposition reader reason relation Robert Lowth Romantic Romanticism sacred seems sensation sense sensible sentiments sight simple ideas Smart soul space spirit sublime suggests suppose Theocritus theory things Thomas Warton thought Tintern Abbey verse vibrations visible Warton words Wordsworth's writing Young