Wordsworth's Preface to Lyrical BalladsRosenkilde and Bagger, 1957 - Всего страниц: 204 |
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Стр. 92
... concerned with this particular sort of authenticity in language , and have thought , perhaps , that " freedom and power " belong rather to the poet than to the man who feels passion ; and to the poet precisely because he is not " under ...
... concerned with this particular sort of authenticity in language , and have thought , perhaps , that " freedom and power " belong rather to the poet than to the man who feels passion ; and to the poet precisely because he is not " under ...
Стр. 102
... concerned primarily with man as his subject - matter . He is concerned to illustrate " general truth , ” the norm of human behaviour , " nature " in the sense of human nature rather than of external nature . And he is concerned to ...
... concerned primarily with man as his subject - matter . He is concerned to illustrate " general truth , ” the norm of human behaviour , " nature " in the sense of human nature rather than of external nature . And he is concerned to ...
Стр. 105
... concerned to trace . 5 He takes them on trust when they do not directly concern his own practice : the account of the Primitive Poet , the comparatively late emergence of metrical form , and the like . There seems to be no direct ...
... concerned to trace . 5 He takes them on trust when they do not directly concern his own practice : the account of the Primitive Poet , the comparatively late emergence of metrical form , and the like . There seems to be no direct ...
Содержание
PREFACE | 11 |
The Theory of Metre | 31 |
The Spontaneous Overflow of Powerful Feelings | 40 |
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Часто встречающиеся слова и выражения
appears Appendix argument authenticity beauty Biog character cited Coleridge Commentary composition connected criticism described distinction Dorothy Wordsworth dramatic poetry effect emotion epitaph Ernest de Selincourt excitement F. W. Bateson figurative Grosart human ideas imagination imitation important Introd language of passion language of poetry language of prose language of rustics less London Lyrical Ballads M. H. Abrams maternal passion means metre metrical mind Monthly Magazine moral nature norm notion objects observation overflow of powerful painful particular passage passions and thoughts perhaps permanent personifications phrase pleasure poem poet poet's poetic diction powerful feelings Preface Prel primitivistic principle probably produced Quintilian Reader real language real passion seems selection sensation sense sentiments Simplon Pass spontaneous overflow style sympathetic identification taste textual textual n theory of poetry thoughts and feelings Tintern Abbey truth utterance verse W. J. B. Owen William Wordsworth words Wordsworth write