Shelley's Prose, Or, The Trumpet of a Prophecy |
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Page 32
... considered Lord Byron's the greatest poetry of his time , he could see its flaws . To Mary he wrote August 7 , 1821 : " We [ Byron and Shelley ] talked a great deal of poetry and such matters last night ; and as usual differed and , I ...
... considered Lord Byron's the greatest poetry of his time , he could see its flaws . To Mary he wrote August 7 , 1821 : " We [ Byron and Shelley ] talked a great deal of poetry and such matters last night ; and as usual differed and , I ...
Page 184
... considered relatively to human identity , for the existence of the human mind . For if the inequalities pro- duced by what has been termed the opera- tions of the external universe were levelled by the perception of our being uniting ...
... considered relatively to human identity , for the existence of the human mind . For if the inequalities pro- duced by what has been termed the opera- tions of the external universe were levelled by the perception of our being uniting ...
Page 185
... considered presumptuous to employ another . But etymologically considered it is very ill adapted to express the science of mind . It asserts a distinction between the moral and the material universe which it is presump- tuous to assume ...
... considered presumptuous to employ another . But etymologically considered it is very ill adapted to express the science of mind . It asserts a distinction between the moral and the material universe which it is presump- tuous to assume ...
Contents
THE GROWTH OF SHELLEYS MIND | 3 |
PROPOSALS FOR AN ASSOCIATION | 169 |
I WILL BEGET A SON | 216 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
action Age of Reason ancient Greece animals assert beauty believe benevolence Catholic Emancipation cause character Christian religion Christianity civilized conception considered crime death Defence of Poetry degree deist Deity Devil divine doctrines earth effect equal Essay eternal evil existence expression feel fragment Godwin Greeks habits happiness heart Holbach human mind Hume Hume's idea imagination institutions Jesus Christ justice labor letter liberty live Lord Lord Bacon Lord Ellenborough mankind Mary Shelley means ment misery moral nation nature Necessity Necessity of Atheism never Note to Queen object opinion pain Paine's paragraph passion perfect person philosophers Plato pleasure poem poet poetry political possess principles produce punishment Queen Mab reason reform Refutation of Deism sense sentiments Shelley Shelley's Note social society sophisms soul Spinoza spirit superstition suppose sympathy things thought tion true truth tyranny tyrants universe virtue wisdom words