Critical History of English Literature, Volume 1Allied Publishers, 1969 - 800 pages |
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Page 853
David Daiches. Contents VOLUME IV CHAPTER 21 THE ROMANTIC POETS I : BLAKE , WORDSWORTH , AND COLERIDGE PAGE 856 22 THE ROMANTIC POETS II : SHELLEY , KEATS , AND BYRON 23 FAMILIAR , CRITICAL , AND MISCELLANEOUS PROSE OF THE EARLY AND ...
David Daiches. Contents VOLUME IV CHAPTER 21 THE ROMANTIC POETS I : BLAKE , WORDSWORTH , AND COLERIDGE PAGE 856 22 THE ROMANTIC POETS II : SHELLEY , KEATS , AND BYRON 23 FAMILIAR , CRITICAL , AND MISCELLANEOUS PROSE OF THE EARLY AND ...
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achieve Arnold attitude ballad beauty Blake blank verse Byron century character Coleridge colloquial combination comedy comic contemporary criticism D. H. Lawrence death deliberately developed Dickens dramatic E. M. Forster effect eighteenth-century Eliot emotional England English English poetry essays experience feeling fiction French Revolution George Eliot give hero human ideal ideas imagery images imagination individual influence intellectual interest irony Keats kind language literary literature living meaning medieval melodrama mind modern mood moral movement moving narrative nature neo-Platonic never nineteenth novel novelist passion pattern plays poem poet poetic poetry political Pre-Raphaelite present problems produced prose reader relation rhythms romantic romanticism Ruskin satire scene sense sentimental Shelley shows significant social society sometimes stanza story style suggestion symbolic T. S. Eliot Tennyson theme things thought tion tone tradition verse Victorian Virginia Woolf vision W. S. Gilbert whole words Wordsworth writing Yeats