Nature's Sternest Painter: Five Essays on the Poetry of George Crabbe |
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Page 92
... entirely comfortable : Turn to the watery world ! -but who to thee ( A wonder yet unview'd ) shall paint - the sea ? [ The Borough I , 163–164 . ] The fact that he does paint the sea is significant when we ob- serve how he does it . The ...
... entirely comfortable : Turn to the watery world ! -but who to thee ( A wonder yet unview'd ) shall paint - the sea ? [ The Borough I , 163–164 . ] The fact that he does paint the sea is significant when we ob- serve how he does it . The ...
Page 126
... entirely absent ( as it was not entirely absent from the stories in The Borough ) , and those tales , such as " The Parting Hour , " where it is most nearly absent are apt to seem either slightly sentimental or , as in the case of " The ...
... entirely absent ( as it was not entirely absent from the stories in The Borough ) , and those tales , such as " The Parting Hour , " where it is most nearly absent are apt to seem either slightly sentimental or , as in the case of " The ...
Page 134
... entirely Crabbe's own . Certainly the opening 130 lines of Book IV incorporate certain reflections of the elderly poet , but they are quite transmuted into those of the fictional character ; I would say that these par- ticular lines ...
... entirely Crabbe's own . Certainly the opening 130 lines of Book IV incorporate certain reflections of the elderly poet , but they are quite transmuted into those of the fictional character ; I would say that these par- ticular lines ...
Contents
CRABBE AND THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY | 1 |
CRABBE IN THE ROMANTIC MOVEMENT | 57 |
CRABBE AS NATURE POET | 88 |
Copyright | |
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