Poets and Puritans: By T.R. Glover ...Methuen & Company, Limited, 1923 - 323 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 22
Page 19
... wonder would much more : yet such to some appeare . ( ii . , Introductory stanzas 1 ) This is Spenser's Multi pertransibunt et augebitur scientia , and we must not let its seriousness be lost sight of in its application , nor the humour ...
... wonder would much more : yet such to some appeare . ( ii . , Introductory stanzas 1 ) This is Spenser's Multi pertransibunt et augebitur scientia , and we must not let its seriousness be lost sight of in its application , nor the humour ...
Page 32
... wonder and the power " Nothing is sure that growes on earthly grownd . ( i . 9 , 11. ) These are the words of Prince Arthur . This is the state of Keasars and of Kings ! Let none therefore , that is in meaner place , Too greatly grieve ...
... wonder and the power " Nothing is sure that growes on earthly grownd . ( i . 9 , 11. ) These are the words of Prince Arthur . This is the state of Keasars and of Kings ! Let none therefore , that is in meaner place , Too greatly grieve ...
Page 65
... wonder or terror or beauty , and so set down that the reader feels it rather than strays away to admire the poet's skill . By a poem being sensuous Milton means that it must appeal to our sense of beauty along the lines of our ...
... wonder or terror or beauty , and so set down that the reader feels it rather than strays away to admire the poet's skill . By a poem being sensuous Milton means that it must appeal to our sense of beauty along the lines of our ...
Page 71
... wonder and glory and happiness that any chance look may reveal in the most familiar spot . The measure of our enjoyment and expectation of enjoyment gives our right to criticize Paradise Lost . The philosophy is there -the cumulative ...
... wonder and glory and happiness that any chance look may reveal in the most familiar spot . The measure of our enjoyment and expectation of enjoyment gives our right to criticize Paradise Lost . The philosophy is there -the cumulative ...
Page 94
... wonder . " " 12 One can imagine how the " peculiarly bright black eyes " 3 of the cleverest of English kings looked through his faithful subject . But Evelyn's suspicions , like many other men's , grew keener as time went on . After the ...
... wonder . " " 12 One can imagine how the " peculiarly bright black eyes " 3 of the cleverest of English kings looked through his faithful subject . But Evelyn's suspicions , like many other men's , grew keener as time went on . After the ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Account of Corsica Aldeburgh allegory Areopagitica beauty Boswell Bunyan called Cambridge Carlyle Carlyle's Christian Church Church of England Coleridge Corsica Cowper Crabbe Crabbe's criticism Cromwell death doth Dr Johnson England English eternal Evelyn experience eyes Faerie Queene fancy father feeling French Revolution George Crabbe George Fox happy hath heart Heaven Hebrides Heroes Horace Walpole human humour imagination King knew Knight Lady Hesketh later Letter to Temple liberty lived London look Lord marriage Milton mind nature never Olney once Paoli Paradise Lost passage Pepys perhaps Pilgrim's Progress Plato poem poet poet's poetry poor Prelude Prose Puritan reader religion says seems sense soul Spenser spirit story strange talk tells things thou thought true truth Unwin verse wonder words Wordsworth writes wrote young