The Cambridge History of English Literature: The nineteenth century. ISir Adolphus William Ward, Alfred Rayney Waller The University Press, 1915 - English literature |
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Page viii
... Coleridge . Thomas Hood . The Plea of the Midsummer Fairies . Winthrop Mackworth Praed . Sir Henry Taylor . Philip van Artevelde . George Darley . Thomas Lovell Beddoes . Death's Jest Book . Charles Jeremiah Wells . Joseph and his ...
... Coleridge . Thomas Hood . The Plea of the Midsummer Fairies . Winthrop Mackworth Praed . Sir Henry Taylor . Philip van Artevelde . George Darley . Thomas Lovell Beddoes . Death's Jest Book . Charles Jeremiah Wells . Joseph and his ...
Page x
... Coleridge . Erskine of Linlathen . The noetics . Whately . Hampden . Thomas Arnold . Frederick Denison Maurice . Robertson of Brighton . The Broad Churchmen . Jowett . Stanley . Essays and Reviews . Robertson Smith . Ecce Homo ...
... Coleridge . Erskine of Linlathen . The noetics . Whately . Hampden . Thomas Arnold . Frederick Denison Maurice . Robertson of Brighton . The Broad Churchmen . Jowett . Stanley . Essays and Reviews . Robertson Smith . Ecce Homo ...
Page 7
... Coleridge's Christabel , as yet unpublished . What he , therefore , at first con- templated was , according to Lockhart , to throw the story of Gilpin into a somewhat similar cadence , so that he might produce such an echo of the late ...
... Coleridge's Christabel , as yet unpublished . What he , therefore , at first con- templated was , according to Lockhart , to throw the story of Gilpin into a somewhat similar cadence , so that he might produce such an echo of the late ...
Page 39
... Coleridge to that of Byron and Shelley , we recognise that a certain change had come over the spirit of English poetry , and that this change , in no small measure , was determined by the change which had come over the mind of England ...
... Coleridge to that of Byron and Shelley , we recognise that a certain change had come over the spirit of English poetry , and that this change , in no small measure , was determined by the change which had come over the mind of England ...
Page 42
... Coleridge or Wordsworth can afford to laugh at the travesty of Marmion and Lyrical Ballads . In spite of occasional telling phrases , like that in which he characterises Crabbe as ' nature's sternest painter yet the best , ' the satire ...
... Coleridge or Wordsworth can afford to laugh at the travesty of Marmion and Lyrical Ballads . In spite of occasional telling phrases , like that in which he characterises Crabbe as ' nature's sternest painter yet the best , ' the satire ...
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