| 1968 - 328 oldal
...Coleridge certainly gives evidence of a gift for critical analysis : 'Look! how a bright star shooteth from the sky; So glides he in the night from Venus' eye ! ' How many images and feelings are here brought together without effort and without discord, in the... | |
| Meyer Howard Abrams - 1971 - 420 oldal
...'Aristotelians' confront his example of an imaginative passage — Look! how a bright star shooteth from the sky So glides he in the night from Venus' eye — we see a patent combination of parts; and we go on to explain its difference from Coleridge's illustration... | |
| René Wellek - 1981 - 472 oldal
...multiple relations, as in a favorite passage from Venus and Adonis: Look! how a bright star shooteth from the sky, So glides he in the night from Venus' eye. "How many images, and feelings," Coleridge comments, "are here brought together without effort and... | |
| F. R. Leavis - 1986 - 380 oldal
...he says nothing about it, but gives a very misleading account of: Look! how a bright star shooteth from the sky So glides he in the night from Venus' eye. He does not point out how, when we come to these lines in their place in the poem, 'realization' is... | |
| Steven Axelrod, Helen Deese - 1986 - 286 oldal
...shape into one. Coleridge quotes two lines from "Venus and Adonis" - "Look! how a bright star shooteth from the sky, / So glides he in the night from Venus' eye" - and asks, "How many images and feelings are here brought together ... in the beauty of Adonis, the... | |
| William Shakespeare - 1994 - 212 oldal
...dark laund runs apace; Leaves Love upon her back deeply distrest. Look, how a bright star shooteth from the sky, So glides he in the night from Venus' eye; Which after him she darts, as one on shore Gazing upon a late-embarked friend, Till the wild waves will have him see... | |
| Emerson R. Marks - 1998 - 428 oldal
...suggested by the couplet from Venus and Adonis admired by Coleridge: Look! how bright a star shooteth from the sky! So glides he in the night from Venus' eye. "As Adonis to Venus," Richards remarked, "so these lines to the reader seem to linger in the eye like... | |
| William Shakespeare - 1999 - 212 oldal
...vexation 813 laund glade Leaves love upon her back deeply distressed. Look how a bright star shooteth from the sky, So glides he in the night from Venus' eye; Which after him she darts, as one on shore Gazing upon a late-embarked friend, Till the wild waves will have him seen... | |
| Geoffrey Miles - 1999 - 476 oldal
...laund0 runs apace.0 leaves Love upon her hack, deeply distressed. Look how0 a bright star shooteth from the sky, So glides he in the night from Venus' eye. l37 Which after him she darts, as one on shore Gazing upon a late-emharked friend Till the wild waves... | |
| Samuel Taylor Coleridge - 2001 - 490 oldal
...prospect. Thus the flight of Adonis in the dusk of the evening : — Look I how a bright star shooteth from the sky ; So glides he in the night ^from Venus' eye 1 How many images and feelings are here brought together without eflbrt and without discord, in the... | |
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