... that indestructible love of flowers and odours, and dews and clear waters, and soft airs and sounds, and bright skies, and woodland solitudes, and moonlight bowers, which are the Material elements of Poetry... The Quarterly Review - Pągina 4521818Visualització completa - Sobre aquest llibre
 | William Shakespeare - 1853 - 608 pągines
...beautiful forms and images, with all that is sweet or majestic in the simple aspects of nature, of that indestructible love of flowers and odours, and dews,...and sounds, and bright skies and woodland solitudes, and moonlight bowers, which are the material elements of poetry, — and with that fine sense of their... | |
 | Charles Dexter Cleveland - 1853 - 800 pągines
...sweet or majestic in the simple aspects of nature — that indestructible love of flowers and odors, and dews and clear waters, and soft airs and sounds, and bright skies, and woodland solitudes, and moonlight bowers, which are the Material elements of Poetry — and that fine sense of their undcfinablo... | |
 | Samuel Johnson - 1854 - 360 pągines
...have been to him, it was certainly there that he cultivated his genius for poetry, and that taste for flowers and odours, and dews, and clear waters, and...sounds, and bright skies, and woodland solitudes, and moonlight bowers, which he so charmingly and so genially manifests throughout his verses. He himself... | |
 | David Charles Bell - 1856 - 466 pągines
...images — that eternal recurrence to what is sweet or majestic, in the simple aspect of nature — that indestructible love of flowers and odours, and dews...sounds, and bright skies, and woodland solitudes, and moonlight bowers, which are the material elements of poetry; and that fine sense of their undefinable... | |
 | 1857 - 574 pągines
...images — that eternal recurrence to what is sweet or majestic in the simple aspect of nature — that indestructible love of flowers and odours, and dews...sounds, and bright skies, and woodland solitudes, and moonlight bowers, which are the material elements of poetry — and that fine sense of their undefinablc... | |
 | John Brown - 1861 - 516 pągines
...Jeffrey as applied to Shakspere, Vaughan seems to have had in large measure and of finest quality, " that indestructible love of flowers, and odours, and dews,...sounds, and bright skies, and woodland solitudes, and moonlight, which are the material elements of poetry; and that fine sense of their undefinable... | |
 | Edwin Percy Whipple - 1861 - 420 pągines
...sweet or majestic in the simple aspects of nature — that indestructible love of flowers and odors, and dews and clear waters, and soft airs and sounds, and bright skies, and woodland solitudes, and moonlight bowers, which are the material elements of poetry — and that fine sense of their undefinable... | |
 | John Brown - 1861 - 470 pągines
...have had in large measure and of finest quality, " that indestructible love of flowers, and odors, and dews, and clear waters, and soft airs and sounds, and bright skies, and woodland solitudes, and moonlight, which are the material elements of poetry ; and that fine sense of their undefinable... | |
 | Alexander Ireland - 1868 - 274 pągines
...images — that eternal recurrence to what is sweet or majestic in the simple aspects of nature — that indestructible love of flowers and odours, and dews...sounds, and bright skies, and woodland solitudes, and moonlight bowers, which are the Material elements of Poetry— and that fine sense of their imdefinable... | |
 | 1872 - 556 pągines
...images — that eternal recurrence to what is sweet or majestic in the simple aspects of nature — that indestructible love of flowers and odours, and dews...sounds, and bright skies, and woodland solitudes, and moonlight bowers, which are the material elements of poetry — and that fine sense of their undefinable... | |
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