Keats's Endymion: A Critical EditionWhitston Publishing Company, 1987 - 300 من الصفحات ". . . Steinhoff in his introduction and notes is as illuminating on the influences of the Elizabethans, Milton, and the early Romantics on Keats as he is in his own reading of the poem."CHOICE |
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الصفحة 19
... appears ready to accept fully the Wordsworthian compensation for lost vision in the " natural piety " and " primal sympathy " of Peona and the In- dian Maid . But these moral truths still seem out of tune with his highly erotic nature ...
... appears ready to accept fully the Wordsworthian compensation for lost vision in the " natural piety " and " primal sympathy " of Peona and the In- dian Maid . But these moral truths still seem out of tune with his highly erotic nature ...
الصفحة 48
... appears to me this in the latter case we are falling continually ten thousand fathoms deep and being blown up again without wings and with all [ the ] horror of a bare shoulder'd Creature - in the former case , our shoulders are fledge ...
... appears to me this in the latter case we are falling continually ten thousand fathoms deep and being blown up again without wings and with all [ the ] horror of a bare shoulder'd Creature - in the former case , our shoulders are fledge ...
الصفحة 266
... appear to us to be quite so clear - we really do not know what he means— but the next passage is more intelligible . " The two first books , and indeed the two last , I feel sensible are not of such completion as to warrant their ...
... appear to us to be quite so clear - we really do not know what he means— but the next passage is more intelligible . " The two first books , and indeed the two last , I feel sensible are not of such completion as to warrant their ...
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
Alastor allegory Allott cites Apollo Arethusa Bacchus beauty Blake's bliss Bloom bower breath Cave charm Circe criticism Cynthia dark death descend Diana Dickstein doth dream earth echo Elizabethan Elysium enchantment Endymion essence Evert eyes fair Fall of Hyperion feel flowers Ford³ forms Frye Gardens of Adonis gentle Glaucus goddess golden green grief happy heaven human Hyperion ideal imagination immortal Indian Maid innocence John Keats K.'s letter Keats's King Lear kiss light lovers Lycidas magic melancholy Midsummer Night's Dream Milton moon mortal muse mysterious nature Neoplatonic Neptune's night notes nymph o'er Ovid paradise passion pastoral Peona Phoebe pleasure poem poet poetic prefigurative quest romance sexual Shakespeare's shepherd sigh Sleep and Poetry song sorrow soul spirit sublime sweet Tempest thee thine things thou trees truth twas University Press Venus and Adonis vision voice wings Wordsworth's Wordsworthian young youth