Studies in Poetry |
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Sivu 12
The consequences produced by the conjunction of the Renaissance and the Reformation lay primarily in the growth of a new spirit of nationalism , repudiation of the Pan - European papal authority , the growth and development of national ...
The consequences produced by the conjunction of the Renaissance and the Reformation lay primarily in the growth of a new spirit of nationalism , repudiation of the Pan - European papal authority , the growth and development of national ...
Sivu 66
Originally developed among the Sicilian Greeks ( probably with - Theocritus , whose poems were the earliest known pastorals ) , it was later developed by Virgil and introduced into England during the Renaissance .
Originally developed among the Sicilian Greeks ( probably with - Theocritus , whose poems were the earliest known pastorals ) , it was later developed by Virgil and introduced into England during the Renaissance .
Sivu 162
It is in developing this doctrine of the nature of man that Wordsworth's greatest debt to the intellectual movements of his age lies . His idea of man is essentially the same as those developed by the leaders of French Revolution .
It is in developing this doctrine of the nature of man that Wordsworth's greatest debt to the intellectual movements of his age lies . His idea of man is essentially the same as those developed by the leaders of French Revolution .
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Sisältö
CHAPTER | 1 |
The Historical Concept of the Renaissance | 2 |
Forces in Renaissance Thought | 4 |
Tekijänoikeudet | |
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Absalom According achievements Achitophel action allegory alliteration ancient appeared beauty become begins Book Byron called century character Christian church classical Coleridge conception considered criticism deal death developed Donne Donne's Dryden early effect element Elizabethan emotions England English epic essentially example experience expression fact Faerie Queene feeling followed further genius gives human ideal ideas imagination important influence intellectual interest Italy John Keats King language lines literary literature lived Lock Lycidas lyrical medieval Metaphysical Milton mind moral movement nature never origin Paradise Lost passion perfect period philosophical Platonism poem poet poetic poetry political Pope Pope's present principle Puritanism qualities Rape reason Reformation religious Renaissance represents Romantic Satan satire sense Shelley Shelley's shows social soul speech Spenser spirit stanza style theme theory things thought tion tradition universe verse whole Wordsworth writing