Shelley's Prose: Or, The Trumpet of a Prophecy |
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Page 29
... passion , and composed with more attention to the refinement and accuracy of language , and the connection of its parts . " Again concerning the same poem , Shelley wrote to a publisher on October 13 , 1817 : " I am conscious , indeed ...
... passion , and composed with more attention to the refinement and accuracy of language , and the connection of its parts . " Again concerning the same poem , Shelley wrote to a publisher on October 13 , 1817 : " I am conscious , indeed ...
Page 31
... passion . It is thus that the most remote and the most familiar imagery may alike be fit for dramatic purposes when ... passions and searches the understanding more completely , but the former appeals to the imagination , who is the ...
... passion . It is thus that the most remote and the most familiar imagery may alike be fit for dramatic purposes when ... passions and searches the understanding more completely , but the former appeals to the imagination , who is the ...
Page 322
... passion , aggra- vated by every circumstance of cruelty and violence . This daughter , after long and vain attempts ... passions , and opinions , acting upon and with each other , yet all conspiring to one tremendous end , would be as a ...
... passion , aggra- vated by every circumstance of cruelty and violence . This daughter , after long and vain attempts ... passions , and opinions , acting upon and with each other , yet all conspiring to one tremendous end , would be as a ...
Contents
ESSAYS | 28 |
PROPOSALS FOR AN ASSOCIATION | 169 |
A VINDICATION | 181 |
Copyright | |
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action Age of Reason animals assert beauty believe benevolence called Catholic Emancipation cause character conception considered contemplation death Defence of Poetry degree Deism deist Deity Devil divine doctrines earth edition effect equal Essay eternal evil existence expression feel fragment genius Godwin Greek habits happiness heart human mind Hume Hume's idea imagination Jesus Christ justice labor Laocoön letter liberty live Lord Ellenborough mankind Mary Shelley ment misery moral nation nature necessity Necessity of Atheism never object opinion pain Paine's paragraph passion Percy Bysshe Shelley perfect person philosophy Plato pleasure poem poet poetry political possess present principles produce prose punishment Queen Mab reason reform Refutation of Deism rendered Roger Ingpen ruin seems sense sentiments Shelley Shelley's Note social society sophisms soul Spinoza spirit superstition suppose sympathy things thought tion Translation true truth tyrants universe virtue words writers