Anthology of Romanticism: Guide through the romantic movement.- v. 2. Selections from the pre-romantic movement.- v. 3. Blake, Coleridge, Wordsworth, Lamb and Hazlitt.- v. 4. Scott, Southey, Campbell, Landor, Moore, and Byron.- v. 5. Keats, Shelley, Leigh Hunt, De Quincey and CarlyleErnest Bernbaum Nelson, 1930 |
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Page 37
... voice of the king of Morven ; if , in a word , we contemplated the untutored Caledonians , glowing with the warm virtues of nature , and the degenerate Romans , polluted with the mean vices of wealth and slavery . - History of the ...
... voice of the king of Morven ; if , in a word , we contemplated the untutored Caledonians , glowing with the warm virtues of nature , and the degenerate Romans , polluted with the mean vices of wealth and slavery . - History of the ...
Page 49
... voice ; their king led in triumph and an arbitrary monarch surrendering himself to his subjects . After sharing in the benefits of one1 revolution I have been spared to be a witness to two other revolutions , both glorious . And now ...
... voice ; their king led in triumph and an arbitrary monarch surrendering himself to his subjects . After sharing in the benefits of one1 revolution I have been spared to be a witness to two other revolutions , both glorious . And now ...
Page 393
... voice in the wilderness , first uttered that approval of the poetry of Keats and Shelley which he was to persist in throughout his long life . The Tory reviewers looked upon Hunt's poetry as that of a man who had been found guilty of ...
... voice in the wilderness , first uttered that approval of the poetry of Keats and Shelley which he was to persist in throughout his long life . The Tory reviewers looked upon Hunt's poetry as that of a man who had been found guilty of ...
Contents
THE APPROACH TO THE SUBJECT II | 9 |
THE PREROMANTIC MOVEMENT | 15 |
WILLIAM BLAKE | 69 |
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admired Asso authors ballads beauty BIBLIOGRAPHY biography Blake Byron Carlyle century character Charles Lamb chief Coleridge Coleridge's criticism death edition England English Essays evil expression feelings French Revolution friends genius German Godwin happiness Hazlitt heroes human Hunt's ideal ideas imagination important influence intellectual interpretation John John Keats Keats Keats's Lady Landor later Leigh Hunt letters literary literature lived Lord Byron Lyrical Lyrical Ballads Mary ment Milton mind modern Moore moral mystical nature Ossian passages Paul Elmer period philosophical poems poet poetical poetry political principles prose Publ published Quincey religion romantic movement Romanticism School of Sensibility seemed selections sense sentimental Shakspere Shelley Shelley's Sir Walter Scott sonnet soul Southey Spenser spirit style theory Thomas Thomas De Quincey thought tion true truth ture universe verse views vols volume Waverley Novels William William Blake William Hazlitt Wordsworth writings wrote young youth