Romanticism and the Social Order 1780-1830 |
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Page 215
... mind and the process of cognition into its system , and in this lay its fundamental weakness . It was content to take the surface of things as the only reality , whereas the truth was that reality always lay beneath the surface . It ...
... mind and the process of cognition into its system , and in this lay its fundamental weakness . It was content to take the surface of things as the only reality , whereas the truth was that reality always lay beneath the surface . It ...
Page 314
... mind ; the mind has created it , and therefore it is true . And so Keats continued : " The imagination may be compared to Adam's dream— he awoke and found it truth . I am the more zealous in this affair , because I have never yet been ...
... mind ; the mind has created it , and therefore it is true . And so Keats continued : " The imagination may be compared to Adam's dream— he awoke and found it truth . I am the more zealous in this affair , because I have never yet been ...
Page 339
... mind of man , and that it did not simply reflect some world outside itself : The beings of the mind are not of clay ; Essentially immortal , they create And multiply in us a brighter ray And more beloved existence . ( IV , v . ) The mind ...
... mind of man , and that it did not simply reflect some world outside itself : The beings of the mind are not of clay ; Essentially immortal , they create And multiply in us a brighter ray And more beloved existence . ( IV , v . ) The mind ...
Contents
Acknowledgements | 6 |
List of Illustrations | 7 |
The Age of Romanticism | 9 |
Copyright | |
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artist beauty became Blake Burke Byron called Capability Brown Castle character Christian Church classes Cobbett Coleridge Constable constitution Convention of Cintra corruption Cowper death declared delight Edinburgh Review eighteenth century Elgin marbles England Evangelical evil fear feel France French Revolution George Gillray Godwin hand happy Hazlitt heart human ibid idea imagination influence interest J. M. W. Turner Jacobin John Constable John Nash Keats King labour landscape liberty lived Lord Malthus mankind ment mind misery moral nature never opinion Owen Paine painting passions philosophy picturesque poem poet poetry political poor principles Queen radical reason reform religion religious Robert Owen romantic Romanticism scene Scott sense Shelley social society soul Southey spirit story theme things thou thought Tom Paine tradition true truth Turner virtue whig William William Wilberforce Wordsworth wrote