| Thomas Moore, William Jerdan - 1875 - 316 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.... | |
| Thomas Moore, William Jerdan - 1875 - 328 pages
...objects which is there expressed, not caught by B. from nature herself, but from him (Wordsworth), and spoiled in the transmission. " Tintern Abbey "...is naturally expressed by him, has been worked by Bjfon into a labored and antithetical sort of declamation. 1 Spoke of the Scottish novels. Is sure... | |
| Nicholas Dickson, William Sanderson - 1903 - 270 pages
...by Byron from nature herself, but from him (Wordsworth;, aiid spoiled in the transmission. 'Tinteru Abbey,' the source of it all; from which same poem,...a laboured and antithetical sort of declamation." Uu the same occasion Wordsworth spoke of Scott. He was shrewd enough to be certain that the Waverley... | |
| Wilhelm Engelbert Oeftering - 1901 - 216 pages
...natural objects ,chich is there exprtssed, not caught 1,i/ : .B. from nature herself, but from him (W.) and spoiled in the transmission ; „Tintern Abbey" the source of it all; ... . . with this difference, that what is naturally expressed by him hus been worked by B. into a... | |
| Samuel Claggett Chew - 1924 - 442 pages
..." the feeling for natural objects . . . not caught by Byron from nature herself, but from him (W.), and spoiled in the transmission. Tintern Abbey the source of it all." It was in 1884 that Wordsworth wrote the lines, " Not in the lucid intervals of life," 2 in which,... | |
| Thomas Moore - 1925 - 252 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... | |
| Thomas Moore, Barbara Bartholomew, Joy L. Linsley - 1983 - 412 pages
...but from him, Wordsworth, and spoiled in the transmission—Tintern Abbey the source of it all—from which same poem too the celebrated passage about Solitude in the First Canto of CH is (he said) taken, with this difference that what is naturally expressed by him has been worked... | |
| Andrew Rutherford - 1995 - 536 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" the...a laboured and antithetical sort of declamation.' (Memoirs, Journal and Correspondence of Thomas Moore, ed. Lord John Russell, 1853-6, HI, 161. Cf. The... | |
| George Gordon Byron Baron Byron - 1996 - 868 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 the source of it all' (Thomas Moore, Letters and Journals of Lord Byron, Vol. 1, p. 355). Byron's Titanism, as in the echoes... | |
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