| Leonard Barkan - 1999 - عدد الصفحات: 468
...Wordsworth's real anxiety upon an issue addressed in lines that the poet leaves out of his Milton quotation: "Then thou, our fancy of itself bereaving, / Dost make us marble with too much conceiving."6 If the inanimate are permitted to speak, then, symmetrically, the living must be turned... | |
| Bettine Menke - 2000 - عدد الصفحات: 880
[ عذرًا، محتوى هذه الصفحة مقيَّد ] | |
| Catherine Maxwell - 2001 - عدد الصفحات: 292
...astonishment Hast built thyself a live-long monument. For whilst to the shame of slow-endeavouring art. Thy easy numbers flow, and that each heart Hath...lie. That kings for such a tomb would wish to die. The poem plays with the conceit that Shakespeare requires no formal tomb because his verse is itself... | |
| Jeremy Tambling - 2001 - عدد الصفحات: 174
[ عذرًا، محتوى هذه الصفحة مقيَّد ] | |
| Theresa M. Krier - 2001 - عدد الصفحات: 300
...movement. The statue-Hermione could well have said to Leontes what Milton addressed to Shakespeare: "Then thou our fancy of itself bereaving, / Dost make us Marble with too much conceiving"—the excess of Shakespeare crowding in upon "us" bereaves us of fancy, vitality, movement,... | |
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