The Future Poetry
The Poets of the Dawn – 2 129 and Nature and things, behind intellectual and emotional and vital perception is sought to be seiz ...
130 The Future Poetry for its one sufficient source of power. We find the tongue of this period floating between various possibi ...
The Poets of the Dawn – 2 131 mind and temperament, not, that is to say, always dominated by the aesthetic, imaginative or inspi ...
132 The Future Poetry from the Time-Spirit. His hasty vehement personality caught up and crowded into its work in a strong thoug ...
The Poets of the Dawn – 2 133 of movement, a power of narrative and of vivid presentation, and always, whatever else might lack, ...
134 The Future Poetry and considered, nor the sureness of an inspired interpretation were at his command. But sometimes language ...
The Poets of the Dawn – 2 135 intimate voice that speaks from flower and bird, sky and star, mountain and stream, this he knew, ...
136 The Future Poetry in poetry and this number is not inconsiderable. But elsewhere he rises high, sometimes astonishingly high ...
The Poets of the Dawn – 2 137 sense and spiritual sight meet in a fine harmony, as in his one great Ode, in some of his sonnets, ...
Chapter XVIII The Poets of the Dawn – 3 I FWORDSWORTHandByronfailedbyanexcessoftheal- loy of untransmuted intellect in their wor ...
The Poets of the Dawn – 3 139 great work rich in all the elements of his genius. Intellectuality he had in abundance, a wide, ri ...
140 The Future Poetry this other world, he hears around him the echoes of its sounds and voices. He is not only a seer, but almo ...
The Poets of the Dawn – 3 141 the very stumblings of his life came from the difficulty of such a nature moving in the alien terr ...
142 The Future Poetry which prevents the perfect self-expression that we find only in the few supreme poets. This was due to the ...
The Poets of the Dawn – 3 143 the secret, — for of all English poets he has perhaps the most natural, spontaneous, sweet and unf ...
144 The Future Poetry light, love and freedom intimate and near to men; he has, as in thePrometheus, to go for them to his imagi ...
The Poets of the Dawn – 3 145 largely his choice of rhythms, but wonderfully melodious as is his use or conversion of them to th ...
146 The Future Poetry his own deeper self-expression; they are wonderful richly wo- ven robes of sound and word and image curiou ...
The Poets of the Dawn – 3 147 time had not yet come when these spiritual significances could be more than hinted. Therefore Keat ...
Chapter XIX The Victorian Poets T HE EPOCH associated in England with the name of Vic- toria was in poetry, like that of Pope an ...
«
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
»
Free download pdf