Romanticism and the Social Order 1780-1830 |
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Page 29
... heart like the notes of sweet music , and inspire that delicious melancholy which no person , who had felt it once , would resign for the gayest pleasures . They waken our best and purest feelings ; disposing us to benevolence , pity ...
... heart like the notes of sweet music , and inspire that delicious melancholy which no person , who had felt it once , would resign for the gayest pleasures . They waken our best and purest feelings ; disposing us to benevolence , pity ...
Page 231
... heart . But ' we have hearts as well as heads . We can will and act , as well as think , see , and feel . Is there no communion between the intellectual and the moral ? Are the distinctions of the Schools separates in Nature ? Is there no ...
... heart . But ' we have hearts as well as heads . We can will and act , as well as think , see , and feel . Is there no communion between the intellectual and the moral ? Are the distinctions of the Schools separates in Nature ? Is there no ...
Page 326
... heart on each other for the purpose of forming the soul or intelligence destined to possess the sense of identity ... heart and the world around him . Keats argued that an intelligence without a heart lacked personal identity , and an ...
... heart on each other for the purpose of forming the soul or intelligence destined to possess the sense of identity ... heart and the world around him . Keats argued that an intelligence without a heart lacked personal identity , and an ...
Contents
Acknowledgements | 6 |
List of Illustrations | 7 |
The Age of Romanticism | 9 |
Copyright | |
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artist beauty became Blake Burke Byron Capability Brown Castle character Christian Church classes Cobbett Coleridge Constable constitution Convention of Cintra corruption Cowper death declared Edinburgh Review eighteenth century Elgin marbles England Evangelical evil fear feel France French Revolution George Gillray Godwin 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 Wilberforce William William Godwin William Wilberforce Wordsworth wrote