Gerard Manley HopkinsOxford University Press, 1986 - 429 páginas "Gerard Manley Hopkins was one of the most creative and influential writers of the nineteenth century. This important new edition contains all of his poetry--including such celebrated works as "The Wreck of the Deutschland", "The Windhover", and "Felix Randall"--arranged for the first time in chronological order showing the range of his poetic interests and talents at each stage of his tragically short life. Catherine Phillips has consulted the original manuscripts in order to present accurate versions of the poems and to reveal the poet's own taste more clearly than in previous editions. She has also selected passages which elucidate the poetry from Hopkins's journals, sermons, and letters. From these the reader gains a strong sense of the poet's personality and the breadth of his intellectual pursuits."--Back cover. |
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Página 292
... Devils without bodies and disembodied souls , they suffer nevertheless a torment as of bodily fire . Though burning and other pains afflict us through our bodies yet it is the soul that they 292 THE PRINCIPLE OR FOUNDATION.
... Devils without bodies and disembodied souls , they suffer nevertheless a torment as of bodily fire . Though burning and other pains afflict us through our bodies yet it is the soul that they 292 THE PRINCIPLE OR FOUNDATION.
Página 293
... soul starts into a flame that has some frightful and fantastic likeness to its sin ; so sinners are themselves the flames of hell . O hideous and ungainly sight ! which will cease only when at the day of Judgment the body and the soul ...
... soul starts into a flame that has some frightful and fantastic likeness to its sin ; so sinners are themselves the flames of hell . O hideous and ungainly sight ! which will cease only when at the day of Judgment the body and the soul ...
Página 297
... soul , supposing — always supposing this - there was any sorrow for sin there . We may always suppose there was some sorrow for sin if the sick man wished himself to confess ; that is a sign of itself almost certain and where that has ...
... soul , supposing — always supposing this - there was any sorrow for sin there . We may always suppose there was some sorrow for sin if the sick man wished himself to confess ; that is a sign of itself almost certain and where that has ...
Contenido
The Escorial I | 1 |
Mystico | 7 |
Winter with the Gulf Stream | 15 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Términos y frases comunes
Alphonsus Rodriguez anapaestic beauty Binsey blue breath Bridges bright called Carrion Comfort Castara Catholic Christ Clitheroe clouds comma counterpoint cynghanedd dark death Deutschland Dixon draft in H earth English Eurydice eyes fall Father feet fire flowers follow Fragments Gerard Gerard Manley Hopkins give glory God's grace green hand hear heart heaven Henry Purcell Holy Hopkins wrote Hopkins's inscape instress Jesuit layout leaves letter light look Lord mean Metrical marks mind morning mother nature never night noted Oxford Parnassian Penmaen perhaps piece poem poetry printed prose quod R. W. Dixon rhyme Robert Bridges Roehampton round seems shew sonnet soul spirit Spring sprung rhythm stanza stars stress sweet syllables Text from autograph Text from corrected thee things thou thought transcription trees verse wind words Wreck write written ΙΟ
Referencias a este libro
An Alchemy of Mind: The Marvel and Mystery of the Brain Diane Ackerman Sin vista previa disponible - 2004 |