Carlyle and TennysonUniversity of Iowa Press, 1988 - 284 من الصفحات |
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الصفحة 222
... Maud too , Maud was moved To speak of the mother she loved As one scarce forlorn , Dying abroad and it seems apart From him who had ceased to share her heart , And ever mourning over the feud , The household Fury sprinkled with blood By ...
... Maud too , Maud was moved To speak of the mother she loved As one scarce forlorn , Dying abroad and it seems apart From him who had ceased to share her heart , And ever mourning over the feud , The household Fury sprinkled with blood By ...
الصفحة 223
... Maud , his family and her family , becomes increasingly ' domicentric ' rather than egocentric , and to overlook or ignore his domicentricity is to misjudge Tennyson's purpose in Maud . The hero's feelings for Maud are those of a lover ...
... Maud , his family and her family , becomes increasingly ' domicentric ' rather than egocentric , and to overlook or ignore his domicentricity is to misjudge Tennyson's purpose in Maud . The hero's feelings for Maud are those of a lover ...
الصفحة 229
... Maud , with all its virtues , is marred by Tennyson's parochial interest in current events and his lifelong concern over Rosa Baring . The Princess is marred by neither . One of the difficulties with Maud is Tennyson's apparent ...
... Maud , with all its virtues , is marred by Tennyson's parochial interest in current events and his lifelong concern over Rosa Baring . The Princess is marred by neither . One of the difficulties with Maud is Tennyson's apparent ...
المحتوى
Nature Human History Divine | 36 |
The Riddle of Destiny | 43 |
Ulyssean Influences and Telemachan | 55 |
حقوق النشر | |
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عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
aesthetic Artist assertive image beauty become believe Byron Campbell Carlyle Carlyle's Carlylean character Chartism child clear Coleridge concern critics DeLaura Demeter Divine domestic earth Ecclefechan emphasise Enoch essay eternal fact faith father feeling Froude German German literature God's Goethe Guinevere heart Heaven hero human Hume ideas idylic vision imagery influence Isaac Newton kind Latter-Day Pamphlets Leigh Hunt letter literature Locksley Hall mathematics Maud meaning Memoriam mind moral mother never Newton Novalis Oenone pantheism passage Past and Present perhaps philosopher poem poet poetic praise Prince Princess prophetic qualities readers recognise reflects religion religious reveals Romantic Sartor Resartus seems sense Shakespeare soul speak spirit stars talk Telemachus tells Tennyson Tennyson's idylic Tennyson's poetry Tennysonian things Thomas Carlyle thou thought true truth Ulysses understand universe Victorian Voltaire whole wife wonder words Wordsworth writes wrote