The London Quarterly Review, Volúmenes69-70Theodore Foster, 1842 |
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... natural eloquence of a fervid mind deliver- casion he was willing to be commonplace ) , it | ing itself of what is strongly felt , rather than is certainly the attribute of such writers to by any frequency of fanciful embellish- give ...
... natural eloquence of a fervid mind deliver- casion he was willing to be commonplace ) , it | ing itself of what is strongly felt , rather than is certainly the attribute of such writers to by any frequency of fanciful embellish- give ...
Página 2
... natural fluency of the poet . Mr. Words- worth's genius we imagine to have inclined naturally to an easy abundance both of thoughts and words ; but art was to predomi- nate over this inclination wheresoever it was not fit to be indulged ...
... natural fluency of the poet . Mr. Words- worth's genius we imagine to have inclined naturally to an easy abundance both of thoughts and words ; but art was to predomi- nate over this inclination wheresoever it was not fit to be indulged ...
Página 3
... natural objects and a natural pie- ty : - ' Three years she grew in sun and shower ; Then Nature said , " A lovelier flower On earth was never sown ; This child I to myself will take ; She shall be mine , and I will make A lady of my ...
... natural objects and a natural pie- ty : - ' Three years she grew in sun and shower ; Then Nature said , " A lovelier flower On earth was never sown ; This child I to myself will take ; She shall be mine , and I will make A lady of my ...
Página 6
... natural man ' . Coleridge's Ode to Dejection . One of the few profound writers of the present day has described with singular force and truth the intellectual charac- teristics of which this extraordinary man afforded ( as we conceive ) ...
... natural man ' . Coleridge's Ode to Dejection . One of the few profound writers of the present day has described with singular force and truth the intellectual charac- teristics of which this extraordinary man afforded ( as we conceive ) ...
Página 7
... natural object , gives birth to almost every will be attained in their highest degrees . one of them . He does not search his mind Of course we do not mean to say that , for for subjects ; he goes forth into the world , the purposes of ...
... natural object , gives birth to almost every will be attained in their highest degrees . one of them . He does not search his mind Of course we do not mean to say that , for for subjects ; he goes forth into the world , the purposes of ...
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