| Percy Bysshe Shelley - 1905 - 486 pàgines
...I wander down Into the clouds of the Atlantic even ; For grief that I depart they weep and frown : What look is more delightful than the smile With which I soothe them from the western isle? VI. I am the eye with which the Universe Beholds itself and knows itself divine ; All harmony of instrument... | |
| John Churton Collins - 1905 - 332 pàgines
...invisible things," it is the voice of that peace "subsisting at the heart of endless agitation " ; it is the eye With which the Universe Beholds itself and knows itself divine. And, therefore, it is in its transcendental and ethical aspects that poetry is most precious and furthering,... | |
| Bernard M. G. Reardon - 1966 - 420 pàgines
...self-consciousness cannot wholly unite in one concordant self. It is interesting to compare such expressions as : I am the eye with which the Universe Beholds itself and knows itself divine, and They reckon ill who leave me out; When me they fly, I am the wings; 1 am the doubter and the doubt,... | |
| Harold Bayley - 1912 - 394 pàgines
...or orb enables us to reduce the name Apollo into Ap ol lo, the " orb of the Lord Everlasting." 2 " I am the EYE with which the universe Beholds itself...itself divine, All harmony of instrument or verse, All prophecy, all medicine are mine, All light of Art and Nature : — to my song Victory and praise in... | |
| 1909 - 650 pàgines
...prove himself always victor. Percy Bysshe Shelly thus immortalizes the god Apollo in poetic verse: "I am the eye with which the Universe Beholds itself...itself divine; All harmony of instrument or verse, All prophecy, all medicine, are mine; All light of art or nature — to my song Victory and praise in their... | |
| Oscar George Sonneck - 1923 - 648 pàgines
...such is the religion of eternity." All nature passes under the sign, not of Dionysos, but of Apollo: I am the eye with which the Universe Beholds itself...itself divine; All harmony of instrument or verse, All prophecy, all medicine is mine, All light of art or nature.' . . . 'Act I, toward the end. 'Act IV,... | |
| Margot Kathleen Louis - 1990 - 266 pàgines
...constitutes the darkness in which we are lost. THE APOLLONIAN LOGOS: A PRELUDE TO SONGS OF THE SPRINGTIDES I am the eye with which the Universe Beholds itself and knows itself divine. (Shelley, "Hymn of Apollo")1 plicitly to the creation of a new poetics. In 1870 his most pressing problem... | |
| Charles Mills Gayley - 1995 - 682 pàgines
...I wander down Into the clouds of the Atlantic even ; For grief that I depart they weep and frown : What look is more delightful than the smile With which I soothe them from the western isle? 1 On the birth of Apollo, his adventures, names, festivals, oracles, and his place in literature and... | |
| Thomas Bulfinch - 1993 - 390 pàgines
...brother of Diana (Artemis). He was god of the sun, as Diana, his sister, was the goddess of the moon. I am the eye with which the Universe Beholds itself...itself divine; All harmony of instrument or verse, All prophecy, all medicine is mine, All light of art or nature; to my song Victory and praise in its own... | |
| Steven Goldsmith - 1993 - 346 pàgines
...obsessively to the grammatical forms of the first person, culminates in a paean to possessive self-presence: I am the eye with which the Universe Beholds itself, and knows it is divine. All harmony of instrument and verse, All prophecy and medicine are mine; All light of... | |
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