Landscape in Poetry: From Homer to Tennyson with Many Illustrative ExamplesMacmillan, Limited, 1897 - 302 من الصفحات |
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الصفحة 39
... things to the gods , and coupled them with bitter wrath ! what groanings for themselves did they then beget , what wounds for us , what tears for our children's children ! 2 The terrors which the aweful spectacle of the skies rouse in ...
... things to the gods , and coupled them with bitter wrath ! what groanings for themselves did they then beget , what wounds for us , what tears for our children's children ! 2 The terrors which the aweful spectacle of the skies rouse in ...
الصفحة 40
... things , which , in his philosophy , frequent space . Beside them , he says— ... as Some images there are spontaneously generated and formed by themselves in this lower heaven which is called air : at times we see clouds gather together ...
... things , which , in his philosophy , frequent space . Beside them , he says— ... as Some images there are spontaneously generated and formed by themselves in this lower heaven which is called air : at times we see clouds gather together ...
الصفحة 45
... things in the burning heat of noon , the stillness of evening , the gentle imperceptible motions " of Nature , in the shooting up of the young alder - tree and in " the gradual colouring of the grapes on the sunny hill - sides . " 2 ...
... things in the burning heat of noon , the stillness of evening , the gentle imperceptible motions " of Nature , in the shooting up of the young alder - tree and in " the gradual colouring of the grapes on the sunny hill - sides . " 2 ...
الصفحة 48
... thing not quite worthy Roman manhood . Such a feeling may underlie the phrase how in his youth his Muse did not blush to dwell in the woods ; or that his friend Gallus need not be ashamed of his bucolic verse . Or , again , we have the ...
... thing not quite worthy Roman manhood . Such a feeling may underlie the phrase how in his youth his Muse did not blush to dwell in the woods ; or that his friend Gallus need not be ashamed of his bucolic verse . Or , again , we have the ...
الصفحة 72
... things put forth by the moon , And for the chief things of the ancient mountains , and for the precious things of the lasting hills , And for the precious things of the earth and fulness thereof.1 The hundred and fourth Psalm , in ...
... things put forth by the moon , And for the chief things of the ancient mountains , and for the precious things of the lasting hills , And for the precious things of the earth and fulness thereof.1 The hundred and fourth Psalm , in ...
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Aeschylus beauty birds blue boughs breath bright calm Catullus Celtic century charm Chaucer classical clouds Coleridge colour cuckoo deep delight doth early earth Elocutio English exquisite fair feeling flowers fresh garden genius Glen Etive Greek Greek Anthology green hath heart heaven hence Henry Vaughan hills human Italian Italian poetry J. H. Newman Keats land Latin lines literature Lucretius Matthew Arnold mediaeval mind modern moon mountain murmur Nature night nightingale o'er painted passion perhaps Petrarch phrase picture Pindar poem poet poet's poetical Proserpina quote R. W. Church rarely rendered rock Roman scene scenery seems sense sentiment shade Shelley sing Sirmio sleep song sonnet soul Spring stanza stars stream style sweet Tennyson thee Theocritus things thou thought touch trees Vergil verse vignettes waves whilst wild wind woods words Wordsworth δὲ ἐν καὶ τε