Poetry of the Romantic PeriodRoutledge, 2016年3月31日 - 350 頁 First published in 1980. This title provides a critical and historical account of poetry written between 1780 and 1835. The author has been especially concerned to place the great poems and poets of the age in the context of the conventions and traditions in which they wrote, offering new perspectives on familiar works. Poems still famous are examined often in relation to works of a similar kind fashionable at the time but now neglected, and these unconventional groupings throw fresh light on Romantic poetry as a whole. An appendix is included, designed to be read as a supplement to the main text, serving both as a chronology and as a brief guide to works that do not fall within the scope of the main argument. This title will be of interest to students of literature. |
搜尋書籍內容
第 1 到 5 筆結果,共 44 筆
... effects that are more immediately accessible. In such cases I have concentrated on the broad outlines of readings that I believe the poets themselves would have recognized. It has seemed more sensible to discuss representative poems at ...
... effects: Cold was the night wind, drifting fast the snow fell, Wide were the downs and shelterless and naked, When a poor Wanderer struggled on her journey, Weary and way-sore. (Vol. 2, p. 141, 11.1–4) Pathos is aimed at, but the ...
... effects is most often found during the Romantic period in seditious literature. Its finest and subtlest examples, however, are achieved by William Blake in his Songs of Innocence and Experience (1794), a collection that is only partly ...
... effect of Burns's dialect. Clare's weakness, at least in all the poetry he published before 1836—Poems Descriptive of Rural Life and Scenery (1820), The Village Minstrel (1821), The Shepherd's Calendar (1827) and The Rural Muse (1835) ...
... effect of the situation on Christabel, however, is explained in the Conclusion to Part I, where her innocent and gentle resignation is contrasted with her condition in Geraldine's arms: With open eyes (ah woe is me!) Asleep, and ...
內容
The ambiguities of guilt | |
The human predicament | |
Meditations of sympathy | |
Testimonies of individual experience | |
Reappraisals of society | |
Unfamiliar ideas | |
Allegorical alternatives | |
Afterword | |
Notes | |
Index | |