Matthew ArnoldOxford University Press, 1986 - 616 Seiten The two sides of Matthew Arnold's literary achievement--the celebrated verse and prose --are brought together in this single volume. Arnold's major poems, "Stanzas from the Grande Chartreuse," the love poems in the "Switzerland" and "Faded Leaves" sequences, several narrative poems, and his major elegies are found in part one of this volume. The prose selections in part two, arranged in chronological order of composition, span Arnold's entire writing career, beginning with several lively letters from his early correspondence with Arthur Hugh Clough, to his very last essay, "Civilization in the United States." Throughout both the poetry and prose is heard the unmistakable voice of a man whom E.M. Forster aptly described as "a great poet, a civilized citizen, and a prophet." |
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... manner ' . ° ' It was to be feared that , as Goethe grew older and colder , the balance between those two elements of art , science and temperament , would not be preserved . This is just what happened , and hence arose Goethe's last manner ...
... manner ' . ° ' It was to be feared that , as Goethe grew older and colder , the balance between those two elements of art , science and temperament , would not be preserved . This is just what happened , and hence arose Goethe's last manner ...
Seite 427
... manner of writing was he at all affected ; he has no self - conceit ; he does not pose . There is in this particular all the difference in the world between him and the majority of our own French authors , who seem always busy arranging ...
... manner of writing was he at all affected ; he has no self - conceit ; he does not pose . There is in this particular all the difference in the world between him and the majority of our own French authors , who seem always busy arranging ...
Seite 493
... manner of antiquity , when men said Pericles and Camillus . But unlike other titles , it is applied or withheld quite arbitrarily . Surely , where a man has no specific title proper to him , the one plain title of Master or Mr is enough ...
... manner of antiquity , when men said Pericles and Camillus . But unlike other titles , it is applied or withheld quite arbitrarily . Surely , where a man has no specific title proper to him , the one plain title of Master or Mr is enough ...
Inhalt
Mycerinus | 1 |
A Question To Fausta | 7 |
Horatian Echo To an Ambitious Friend | 18 |
Urheberrecht | |
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