The Rise of Romanticism: Essential TextsCarcanet New Press, 1978 - 363 pages |
From inside the book
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Page 4
... means of knowledge . This subjectivism was to become of the very essence of Romanticism , yet the contribution of Locke to the crucial disappearance of the unseen must be attributed more to the example he set for Berkeley , Hume and ...
... means of knowledge . This subjectivism was to become of the very essence of Romanticism , yet the contribution of Locke to the crucial disappearance of the unseen must be attributed more to the example he set for Berkeley , Hume and ...
Page 34
... means the Primogenial ones , . . . which , he says , perished in the Deluge . The Present ones , those which we enjoy , are appointed to a contrary Fate , and must perish by Fire . Lastly , by the New Heavens and the New Earth , which ...
... means the Primogenial ones , . . . which , he says , perished in the Deluge . The Present ones , those which we enjoy , are appointed to a contrary Fate , and must perish by Fire . Lastly , by the New Heavens and the New Earth , which ...
Page 147
... mean we by Genius , but the Power of accomplishing great things without the means generally reputed necessary to that end ? A Genius differs from a good Understanding , as a Magician from a good Architect ; That raises his structure by ...
... mean we by Genius , but the Power of accomplishing great things without the means generally reputed necessary to that end ? A Genius differs from a good Understanding , as a Magician from a good Architect ; That raises his structure by ...
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