Essays, Letters from AbroadMoxon, 1845 - 164 páginas |
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Página x
... look at it through this . " Shelley pursues this method in all his descriptions ; he always , as he says himself , looks beyond the actual object , for an internal meaning , typified , illustrated , or caused by the external appearance ...
... look at it through this . " Shelley pursues this method in all his descriptions ; he always , as he says himself , looks beyond the actual object , for an internal meaning , typified , illustrated , or caused by the external appearance ...
Página 13
... look into the interior of their lives , the most for- tunate of men and the exceptions , as they regard those who possessed the poetic faculty in a high yet inferior degree , will be found on consideration to confine rather than destroy ...
... look into the interior of their lives , the most for- tunate of men and the exceptions , as they regard those who possessed the poetic faculty in a high yet inferior degree , will be found on consideration to confine rather than destroy ...
Página 14
... look to your own motives , and judge not , lest ye be judged . Poetry , as has been said , differs in this respect from logic , that it is not subject to the control of the active powers of the mind , and that its birth and recurrence ...
... look to your own motives , and judge not , lest ye be judged . Poetry , as has been said , differs in this respect from logic , that it is not subject to the control of the active powers of the mind , and that its birth and recurrence ...
Página 20
... look , boy , " said Agathon , " and bring Socrates in ; meanwhile , you , Aristo- demus , recline there near Eryximachus . " And he bade a slave wash his feet that he might recline . Another slave , meanwhile , brought word that ...
... look , boy , " said Agathon , " and bring Socrates in ; meanwhile , you , Aristo- demus , recline there near Eryximachus . " And he bade a slave wash his feet that he might recline . Another slave , meanwhile , brought word that ...
Página 36
... look upon the loveliness of wisdom ; and that contem- plating thus the universal beauty , no longer would he unworthily and meanly enslave himself to the attractions of one form in love , nor one subject of discipline or science , but ...
... look upon the loveliness of wisdom ; and that contem- plating thus the universal beauty , no longer would he unworthily and meanly enslave himself to the attractions of one form in love , nor one subject of discipline or science , but ...
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Términos y frases comunes
actions admirable affectionate Agathon Alcibiades ancient Apollodorus appeared Ariosto Aristodemus Aristophanes arrived Bagni di Lucca beautiful become boat called clouds columns conceive dark DEAR death delight desire Diotima discourse divine effect England Eryximachus eternal evil excellent existence express feel Florence GISBORNE glacier Gods Greeks happiness harmony hear Hesiod Homer honourable hope human imagination immense inhabitants inspired Italy journey lake language LEIGH HUNT Lerici letter living Livorno Lord Byron manner MENEXENUS mind Mont Blanc moral morning mountains nature never night object observe opinion overhang pain Pausanias perfect perhaps perpetually person Phædrus Pisa Plato pleasure poem poetry poets possession praise present produced regard relation rhapsodist road rocks Rome ruins sail scene sculpture seems seen Shelley Socrates spirit sublime suffered things thought tion truth virtue walked whilst wind wonder words write