Crabbe |
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Page 8
... experience of country life and scenery , so different from that of his native Aldeburgh , was of great service in enlarging his poetical outlook . Great Parham , distant about five miles from Sax- mundham , and about thirteen from ...
... experience of country life and scenery , so different from that of his native Aldeburgh , was of great service in enlarging his poetical outlook . Great Parham , distant about five miles from Sax- mundham , and about thirteen from ...
Page 10
... experience of the vice in the rough and reckless homes of the Aldeburgh poor . His sub- sequent medical pursuits must have brought him into occasional contact with it among the middle classes , and even in the manor - houses and ...
... experience of the vice in the rough and reckless homes of the Aldeburgh poor . His sub- sequent medical pursuits must have brought him into occasional contact with it among the middle classes , and even in the manor - houses and ...
Page 11
... experience would have recognised in it a force as well as a fluency remarkable in a young man of twenty - one , and pointing to quite other possi- bilities when the age of imitation should have passed away . In 1775 Crabbe's term of ...
... experience would have recognised in it a force as well as a fluency remarkable in a young man of twenty - one , and pointing to quite other possi- bilities when the age of imitation should have passed away . In 1775 Crabbe's term of ...
Page 15
... experience full of value for the future , though he was still and for some time longer under the spell of the dominant poetic fashion , and still hesitated to " look into his heart and write . " But the time was bound to come when he ...
... experience full of value for the future , though he was still and for some time longer under the spell of the dominant poetic fashion , and still hesitated to " look into his heart and write . " But the time was bound to come when he ...
Page 25
... experience . - However that may have been , the combined cold- ness of his reviewers and failure of his bookseller must have brought Crabbe within as near an approach to despair as his healthy nature allowed . His distress was now ...
... experience . - However that may have been , the combined cold- ness of his reviewers and failure of his bookseller must have brought Crabbe within as near an approach to despair as his healthy nature allowed . His distress was now ...
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acquaintance admirable Aldeburgh Alfred Ainger appeared beauty Beccles Belvoir Castle Borough brother Burke Burke's called character couplet Crabbe seems Crabbe's critics death Dodsley doubt Dudley North Duke early eyes F. W. H. Myers father feel FitzGerald fortune George Crabbe Glemham Glemham Hall Goldsmith Hall happy heart hope human humble interest J. A. Symonds kind lady later Leadbeater Leslie Stephen letter lines literary live London Lord lover married mind Miss Elmy Muston nature neighbourhood neighbours never o'er occasion once Parham Parish Register parishioners passage picture poem poet poet's poetic poetry poor Pope published quoted R. W. Church readers Rendham residence Rogers Scott Sir Eustace Grey sorrows stanzas Stathern story Suffolk taste tells thou thought Thurlow tion told Tovell town Trowbridge truth Vale of Belvoir verse village volume wife Wordsworth writes young youth