English Literature
CHAPTER X. THE AGE OF ROMANTICISM (1800-1850) ipated. He died of fever, in Missolonghi, in 1824. One of his last poems, written ...
CHAPTER X. THE AGE OF ROMANTICISM (1800-1850) Byron’s later volumes,ManfredandCain, the one a curi- ous, and perhaps unconscious ...
CHAPTER X. THE AGE OF ROMANTICISM (1800-1850) pointed, cynical man, who finds no good in life or love or anything. Naturally, wi ...
CHAPTER X. THE AGE OF ROMANTICISM (1800-1850) unsatisfied. In the latter mood he appeals profoundly to all men who have known wh ...
CHAPTER X. THE AGE OF ROMANTICISM (1800-1850) Hopes of high talk with the departed dead. Shelley’s first public school, kept by ...
CHAPTER X. THE AGE OF ROMANTICISM (1800-1850) married, as they said, "in deference to anarch custom." The two infants had alread ...
CHAPTER X. THE AGE OF ROMANTICISM (1800-1850) Out of the day and night A joy has taken flight; Fresh spring, and summer, and win ...
CHAPTER X. THE AGE OF ROMANTICISM (1800-1850) it gives absolutely no impressions of reality. It was written when Shelley, after ...
CHAPTER X. THE AGE OF ROMANTICISM (1800-1850) Far different in character isEpipsychidion(1821), a rhapsody celebrating Platonic ...
CHAPTER X. THE AGE OF ROMANTICISM (1800-1850) saddens and disheartens us, the beauty of the other inspires us with something of ...
CHAPTER X. THE AGE OF ROMANTICISM (1800-1850) of poetry is unequaled by the work of any of his contempo- raries. When we remembe ...
CHAPTER X. THE AGE OF ROMANTICISM (1800-1850) of quarreling with his reviewers, or being crushed by their criticism, he went qui ...
CHAPTER X. THE AGE OF ROMANTICISM (1800-1850) ten on the fly leaf of every volume of Keats’s poetry; for never was there a poet ...
CHAPTER X. THE AGE OF ROMANTICISM (1800-1850) of the preceding century,–and so he set himself to the task of reflecting in moder ...
CHAPTER X. THE AGE OF ROMANTICISM (1800-1850) Throughout this last volume, and especially in "Hyperion," the influence of Milton ...
CHAPTER X. THE AGE OF ROMANTICISM (1800-1850) As Wordsworth’s work is too often marred by the moral- izer, and Byron’s by the de ...
CHAPTER X. THE AGE OF ROMANTICISM (1800-1850) receive the slightest encouragement. Like young Lochinvar, "he rode all unarmed an ...
CHAPTER X. THE AGE OF ROMANTICISM (1800-1850) ion or prejudice. Indeed we could hardly expect anything else before some systemat ...
CHAPTER X. THE AGE OF ROMANTICISM (1800-1850) interested in the art of criticism, and in the appreciation of lit- erature, both ...
CHAPTER X. THE AGE OF ROMANTICISM (1800-1850) LIFE.In the very heart of London there is a curious, old- fashioned place known as ...
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