Nature in Eighteenth Century PoetryUniversity of Allahabad, 1964 - 117 pages |
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Page 17
... give a secondary emphasis to Notwithstanding the fact , that the poems given to the readers I old models and were imitations , they had a peculiar delight in m , which all good imitative poetry brings . It was the sense or wledge of ...
... give a secondary emphasis to Notwithstanding the fact , that the poems given to the readers I old models and were imitations , they had a peculiar delight in m , which all good imitative poetry brings . It was the sense or wledge of ...
Page 105
... give the riches they enjoy : Take in at once , the landscape of the world , At a small inlet , which a grain might close , And half create the wondrous world they see , Our senses as our reason are divine . " When this mood was fully ...
... give the riches they enjoy : Take in at once , the landscape of the world , At a small inlet , which a grain might close , And half create the wondrous world they see , Our senses as our reason are divine . " When this mood was fully ...
Page 111
... give an anticipation of the movement for realism in literature which waited for long to take shape . " He ( Pope ) is supposed to have incited Gay to write the ' Shepherd's Week ' to show that if it be necessary to copy Nature with ...
... give an anticipation of the movement for realism in literature which waited for long to take shape . " He ( Pope ) is supposed to have incited Gay to write the ' Shepherd's Week ' to show that if it be necessary to copy Nature with ...
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Common terms and phrases
appear aspects of Nature atmosphere Autumn background birds blooming breathing bright Century Nature Poetry charms classical Claudian clouds convention couplet created critics David Nicol delight diction divinity Dodsley Eighteenth Century Nature Eighteenth Century poets emotion express fading Fancy favour feeling flocks flowers forests fresh genius Gilfillan green groves harmony Hildebrand Jacob hills human Ibid images imagination imitation inspiration James Thomson Joseph Warton Kensington Garden KHATTRY landscape landscape art Lansdown lastly literary literature living metaphor midst mind models Monody mood moral mountain murmurs Muse Nature's beauties Nineteenth Century o'er observation painting passion pastoral peace pleasure poems poet's poetic Pope realised Reason reflected rills romantic rose rural scenes sense shade Shenstone sincere sing smile solitude song spring stream sublime suggestions things Thomas Denton Thomas Warton Thomson thought thro tion trees verse vivid wave William Lisle Bowles William Shenstone wind wood writing