Browning, Poet and Man: A SurveyG.P. Putnam's sons, 1902 - 282 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 49
Page 15
... humanity in action , but with the primal elements of humanity he has to do ; and he digs where he stands― preferring to ... human eyes to see those pictures on them . He is rather a seer , accordingly , than a fashioner , and what he ...
... humanity in action , but with the primal elements of humanity he has to do ; and he digs where he stands― preferring to ... human eyes to see those pictures on them . He is rather a seer , accordingly , than a fashioner , and what he ...
Page 29
... human level ever lives by either the intellect alone or the affections alone . Every rational being both ' knows ' and ' loves , ' if by these words be meant only the bare abstractions called the ' pure intellect ' and the ' affections ...
... human level ever lives by either the intellect alone or the affections alone . Every rational being both ' knows ' and ' loves , ' if by these words be meant only the bare abstractions called the ' pure intellect ' and the ' affections ...
Page 100
... human folly . Perhaps the feature which angered him most was the habit of trading upon and outrag- ing the most sacred feelings of the human heart in the endeavour to gain clients for a money - making occupation . " There is no sign in ...
... human folly . Perhaps the feature which angered him most was the habit of trading upon and outrag- ing the most sacred feelings of the human heart in the endeavour to gain clients for a money - making occupation . " There is no sign in ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Abt Vogler admirable Æschylus Anael Andrea Andrea del Sarto artist Asolo beauty Berdoe Browning Society Browning wrote Browning's poetry called Camberwell century certainly character charm critic death divine Djabal drama Druses edition English expression eyes fact father feeling Fifine friends fugue G. P. PUTNAM'S SONS genius give heart honour human idea illustrations imagination impression impulse ing's inspired intellectual interesting Italian Italy J. W. Alexander less letters literary living London marriage Master Hugues ment mind Miss Barrett moral nature never painters painting Paracelsus passion Pauline perhaps picture Pippa Passes play poem poet poet's poetic pure qualities reader recognised rhyme Ring Robert Browning says seems sentiment Shelley Sordello soul spirit Strafford style sympathy temperament Tennyson thing thought TILDEN FOUNDATIONS tion touched truth verse volume wife words writing written YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY