Romantic Reassessment, Volumes 96-98Institut für Englische Sprache und Literatur, Universität Salzburg., 1983 - English literature |
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Page 159
... letter office , and the narrator speculates that his reading of such letters had aggra- vated his " pallid hopelessness . " If such were the case , however , why did not Bartleby go directly to the Tombs without passing the narrator's ...
... letter office , and the narrator speculates that his reading of such letters had aggra- vated his " pallid hopelessness . " If such were the case , however , why did not Bartleby go directly to the Tombs without passing the narrator's ...
Page 99
... letter to Bailey dated 22 November 25 have an obvious relation to the meaning of the poem . These are threefold . The first relates to the nature of the imagination as a prophetic power : " The Imagination may be compared to Adam's ...
... letter to Bailey dated 22 November 25 have an obvious relation to the meaning of the poem . These are threefold . The first relates to the nature of the imagination as a prophetic power : " The Imagination may be compared to Adam's ...
Page 281
... letter by far his fullest statement of the problem of pain and immortality of the soul - synchronise with his composition of the ' Ode to Psyche ' during the latter part of April . The letter paraphrases in abstract terms the myth of ...
... letter by far his fullest statement of the problem of pain and immortality of the soul - synchronise with his composition of the ' Ode to Psyche ' during the latter part of April . The letter paraphrases in abstract terms the myth of ...
Contents
RECONCILIATIONS IN COLERIDGES POLITICS | 95 |
THE STRUCTURE OF KEATSS I STOOD TIPTOE UPON | 111 |
THE LAST PARAGRAPH OF BARTLEBY Gerald Hoag | 161 |
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Agnes allusion appears associated beauty become begins Blake Byron calls Castle Christ Christian close contemplative continues contrast critical dark death describes divine dream eine Endymion eternal Eve of St experience expression eyes fall feel figures final gives hand happiness human Hyperion idea imagery imagination immortality John Keats Keats's kind knowledge letter light lines living London look lovers Madeline Manfred Mary Magdalene meaning Menschen mind mortal mystery myth nature never nicht Nightingale once opening pain painting perhaps philosophical phrase picture play poem poet poetic poetry Press probably Psyche reading reality reason recalls refers religious represents says seems sense shows sich sleep soul spirit stanza stillness story suggests symbols theme things thought tion truth turn University vision writes York