Maud and Other PoemsMethuen, 1899 - 124 |
Z wnętrza książki
Wyniki 1 - 5 z 13
Strona viii
... stanzas of Maud are a bitter invective against all the evils which peace and prosperity have brought to the land - mammon - worship , dis- honest gain , mutual distrust , oppression of the poor , drunkenness , wife - beating ...
... stanzas of Maud are a bitter invective against all the evils which peace and prosperity have brought to the land - mammon - worship , dis- honest gain , mutual distrust , oppression of the poor , drunkenness , wife - beating ...
Strona xi
... stanzas and unforgettable single lines , which will be commented on in their proper place -nor has he often been more successful as a painter in words than in some of the dashes of bright colour with which he has relieved the sombre ...
... stanzas and unforgettable single lines , which will be commented on in their proper place -nor has he often been more successful as a painter in words than in some of the dashes of bright colour with which he has relieved the sombre ...
Strona 6
... moor and the main . Why should I stay ? can a sweeter chance ever come to me here ? 1 What ! am I , etc. ] This stanza and the two that follow are not in 1st edition . O , having the nerves of motion as well as 6 MAUD.
... moor and the main . Why should I stay ? can a sweeter chance ever come to me here ? 1 What ! am I , etc. ] This stanza and the two that follow are not in 1st edition . O , having the nerves of motion as well as 6 MAUD.
Strona 10
... stanzas which follow . From this point there is a crescendo movement of hopefulness and brightness suited to the progress of spring into summer and the increasing buoyancy of the speaker's spirits . IV I A MILLION emeralds break from ...
... stanzas which follow . From this point there is a crescendo movement of hopefulness and brightness suited to the progress of spring into summer and the increasing buoyancy of the speaker's spirits . IV I A MILLION emeralds break from ...
Strona 11
... stanzas were mainly suggested at Farringford , in the Isle of Wight , which had recently become the poet's home , and is a paradise of natural beauty , with its rich woodlands , its birds and flowers , its wide breezy downs , and its ...
... stanzas were mainly suggested at Farringford , in the Isle of Wight , which had recently become the poet's home , and is a paradise of natural beauty , with its rich woodlands , its birds and flowers , its wide breezy downs , and its ...
Inne wydania - Wyświetl wszystko
Kluczowe wyrazy i wyrażenia
1st edition reads ALFRED LORD TENNYSON Arabian night army babble battle beat beautiful blood bow'd bright brook brother Brunelleschi bury Cannon cold crown dark dead dear Death delight dream DUKE OF WELLINGTON eagle earth echo ELIZABETH WORDSWORTH evil eyes F. D. MAURICE father feet flash'd flow To join French garden gloom glory gone grave half Hall hand happy head hear heart hero honour horses Idylls Isle of Wight join the brimming Katie Lamech land Light Brigade lilies Lincolnshire lines Lombard look'd lord Maud Maud's lover meadow mind night noble o'er passionate peace Pentagram people's voice poem poison'd poor rings Romeo and Juliet rose Rosy seem'd shell Shining daffodil sighs silent smile stanzas stood sweet Tennyson's thee Their's thine things thou thought thro told true vext Waterloo weep Wellington wood ΙΟ