God and the Poets |
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Page 97
... poet's sense of loneliness and point back to his musing self ; the invitation to eat the lotos is always in the back- ground , if it is not in the foreground . How utterly different , in its use of language and in its placing of the poet's ...
... poet's sense of loneliness and point back to his musing self ; the invitation to eat the lotos is always in the back- ground , if it is not in the foreground . How utterly different , in its use of language and in its placing of the poet's ...
Page 98
David Daiches. objectively existing God is no longer a factor in the poet's con- sciousness . Whitman uses what might ... poet's own self and his own mood , as so much English nineteenth - century poetry is ; it takes real cognizance of ...
David Daiches. objectively existing God is no longer a factor in the poet's con- sciousness . Whitman uses what might ... poet's own self and his own mood , as so much English nineteenth - century poetry is ; it takes real cognizance of ...
Page 104
... poetic experience ( and for them poetry was the record of an experience ) lay in the poet's sensibility and in that only ; for Whitman , too , the poet's response created everything ; there is not in either case any counterpointing of ...
... poetic experience ( and for them poetry was the record of an experience ) lay in the poet's sensibility and in that only ; for Whitman , too , the poet's response created everything ; there is not in either case any counterpointing of ...
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Common terms and phrases
Adam Adam's antinomian argument argument from design Arnold beauty belief Book of Job Burns Burns's C.S. Lewis called Calvinist Canto century Christ Christian creed Dante Dante's darkness death deism divine doctrine earth Edwin Muir English eternal evil experience expression faith Fall feeling Gifford Lectures glory God's goes grace hast Heaven Hebrew Hopkins Hugh MacDiarmid human imagery images imagination innocent James Thomson Job's justice kind language lecture literature Lord MacDiarmid man's meaning Milton mind mood moral moving mystery Nature never night orthodox Paradise Lost paradox poem poet poet's poetic poetry praise Psalm reader reality religion religious Sangschaw Satan Scotland Scottish seems sense sing speech stanza Stevens suffering suggest symbolic tells Tennyson thee theodicy theology things Thomson thou thought tion tradition truth universe Victorian poet vision visionary voice W.B. Yeats Wallace Stevens Whitman wicked words