The Touchstones of Matthew Arnold |
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Page 23
... never attain . Coleridge , as I have already suggested , had precisely the power which Arnold lacked ; and yet he dealt with concepts even more subtle and difficult of exposition than those with which Arnold was concerned . Cole ...
... never attain . Coleridge , as I have already suggested , had precisely the power which Arnold lacked ; and yet he dealt with concepts even more subtle and difficult of exposition than those with which Arnold was concerned . Cole ...
Page 172
... never to submit or yield : And what is else not to be overcome ? That Glory never shall his wrath or might Extort from me . To bow and sue for grace With suppliant knee , and deify his power Who from the terror of this Arm so late ...
... never to submit or yield : And what is else not to be overcome ? That Glory never shall his wrath or might Extort from me . To bow and sue for grace With suppliant knee , and deify his power Who from the terror of this Arm so late ...
Page 239
... never have been pub- lished . And what does he do ? He looks here and there at Keats's life , looks here and there at letters to the publication of which he does not object , until he finds " signs of virtue " and " proof of character ...
... never have been pub- lished . And what does he do ? He looks here and there at Keats's life , looks here and there at letters to the publication of which he does not object , until he finds " signs of virtue " and " proof of character ...
Contents
CHAPTER PAGE Introduction | 13 |
The Pathos of Young Death | 34 |
The Manifold Sorrow of Man | 52 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
allusiveness appear Arnold's mind Arnold's poetry Arnold's verse Arnoldean Balder beauty Celtic Ceres chapter characteristic of Arnold Chaucer context courage criticism Dante Dante's death Divine Comedy earth Empedocles entry essay expression feel felicity formal prose fortitude grace grand style grief habit Hamlet heart heaven high seriousness I. A. Richards ibid Iliad Inferno instance invictus King Henry Lacedaemon lack Laleham Letters to Clough literature live Loeb Matthew Arnold Maurice de Guérin melancholy Milton misery moral moreover need for peace never notebooks pain Paradise Lost pathetic pathos Peleus personal estimate phrases Piccarda poem poet poetic Priam quoted reader reference reflected repose reveal Rustum Satan says Arnold seems sense Shakespeare Sophocles sorrow soul spirit stanza stone Study of Poetry Temple Classics things thou thought tion touch touchstone lines touchstone mood touchstone passage touchstone verses transl Translating Homer Trilling Ugolino's utterance Virgil virtue Wisdom Zeus