The Gentleman's Magazine, Volume 238F. Jefferies, 1968 The "Gentleman's magazine" section is a digest of selections from the weekly press; the "(Trader's) monthly intelligencer" section consists of news (foreign and domestic), vital statistics, a register of the month's new publications, and a calendar of forthcoming trade fairs. |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 82
Page 184
THE TRAMMELS OF POETIC EXPRESSION . BY ARTHUR CLIVE . GREAT American poet has refused to employ the conventional medium of modern poetic expression . That Walt Whitman is a great poet is now almost uni- versally recognised , and that a ...
THE TRAMMELS OF POETIC EXPRESSION . BY ARTHUR CLIVE . GREAT American poet has refused to employ the conventional medium of modern poetic expression . That Walt Whitman is a great poet is now almost uni- versally recognised , and that a ...
Page 185
... poet of an advanced age as corks and bladders to a stout and practised swimmer , would it not be well to acknowledge the fact freely and universally , and so preserve our coming poets from adopting artifices unworthy the maturity of the ...
... poet of an advanced age as corks and bladders to a stout and practised swimmer , would it not be well to acknowledge the fact freely and universally , and so preserve our coming poets from adopting artifices unworthy the maturity of the ...
Page 187
... poet there should be an alliteration , the poets would have obeyed . It shows how completely the poet is the product of his age - it proves nothing as to the question of the essentiality of metre in poetry . Shelley , with that massive ...
... poet there should be an alliteration , the poets would have obeyed . It shows how completely the poet is the product of his age - it proves nothing as to the question of the essentiality of metre in poetry . Shelley , with that massive ...
Contents
29 | 112 |
Charles Kingsley in the Saddle By W SENIOR | 137 |
One Writ with Me in Sour Misfortunes Book | 157 |
18 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
admiration Alexandre Dumas Alyn asked Bagot Beauchief believe better boat boys called Captain Cameron Chiltern Christmas Pembroke course Cramp criticism daughter dear Democratic Desclée Durewoods England English Enone esprit eyes father feeling flogging French Gambetta genius Gentleman's Magazine German girl glad Goethe Hampton Lucy hand Hans Vogel hear heart Hood Jansen Jessy knew Lady Disdain Lady Egla live London look Lord Marie Challoner mean Merlin metre mind Miss Challoner Miss Lyle morning Natty nature never night Oakham once party perhaps poet poetic poetry political poor prose Seagraves seemed seen Shakespeare side Sir John Challoner smile sort soul speak suppose sure Sybil talk tell things thought told Tom Hood turned Ultramontane verse Wigmore Street woman words write young Young Ireland