| 1853 - 582 pages
...natural objects which is there expressed not caught by B. from nature herself, but from him (Wordsworth), and spoiled in the transmission. " Tintern Abbey"...into a laboured and antithetical sort of declamation. Again, Wordsworth — Spoke of the very little real knowledge of poetry that existed now so few men... | |
| 1853 - 1074 pages
...objects which is there expressed, not caught by B. from nature herself, but from him (Wordsworth), and spoiled in the transmission. ' Tintern Abbey'...declamation.* Spoke of the Scottish novels. Is sure they are Scott's. The only doubt he ever had on the question did not arise from thinking them too good to be... | |
| Samuel Greatheed, Daniel Parken, Theophilus Williams, Josiah Conder, Thomas Price, Jonathan Edwards Ryland, Edwin Paxton Hood - 1853 - 814 pages
...objects, which is there expressed, not caught by Byron from Nature herself, but from him (Wordsworth), and spoiled in the transmission. ' Tintern Abbey'...solitude, in the first canto of ' Childe Harold,' (he said), taken, with this difference, — that what is naturally expressed by him has been worked... | |
| 1853 - 418 pages
...herself, but from him (Wordsworth), and spoiled 150 151 in the transmission. ' Tintern Abbey,' the I source of it all ; from which same poem too, the celebrated...the first canto of ' Childe Harold,' is, (he said,) I taken, with this difference, that what is naturally expressed by him, has been worked by Byron into... | |
| University magazine - 1853 - 814 pages
...objects which is there expressed, not caught by B. from nature herself, bnt from him (Wordsworth), and spoiled in the transmission. ' Tintern Abbey'...which same poem, too, the celebrated passage about FOlitude, in tlie first canto of 'Childe Harold,' is (he said) taken, with this difference, that what... | |
| 1853 - 820 pages
...caught by B. from nature herself, but from him (Wordsworth), and spoiled in the transmission. ' Tintei n Abbey' the source of it all, from which same poem, too, the celebrated passage about юlitttde, in the first canto of 'Childe Harold,' is (he said) taken, with this dilPerencc, that what... | |
| 1853 - 796 pages
...caught by B. from nature herself, but from him (Wordsworth), and spoiled in the transmission. 'Tintein Abbey ' the source of it all, from which same poem, too, the celebrated passage about tnlitudc, in the first canto of 'Childe Harold,' is (he said) taken, with this difference, that •what... | |
| William Keddie - 1854 - 400 pages
...objects which is there expressed, not caught by B. from nature herself, but from him (Wordsworth), and spoiled in the transmission. Tintern Abbey, the...declamation. Spoke of the Scottish Novels. Is sure they are Scott's. The only doubt he ever had on the question did not arise from thinking them too good to be... | |
| 1857 - 514 pages
...objects which is there expressed, not caught by B. from nature herself, but from him (Wordsworth), and spoiled in the transmission. ' Tintern Abbey'...declamation.* Spoke of the Scottish novels. Is sure they are Scott's. The only doubt he ever had on the question did not arise from thinking them too good to be... | |
| Thomas Moore - 1875 - 322 pages
...objects which is there expressed, not caught by B. from nature herself, but from him (Wordsworth), and spoiled in the transmission. " Tintern Abbey "...expressed by him, has been worked by Byron into a labored and antithetical sort of declamation.1 Spoke of the Scottish novels. Is sure they are Scott's.... | |
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