This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can usually download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1844 edition. Excerpt: ... COLLOQUIES, DESULTOBY AND DIVERSE, BUT CHIEFLY UPON POETRY AND POETS. INTRODUCTORY CHAPTER. "There is Poetry that is not written. As I here use it, it is delicate perception; something which is in the nature, enabling one man to detect harmony, and know forms of beauty better than another. It is like ...
Read More
This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can usually download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1844 edition. Excerpt: ... COLLOQUIES, DESULTOBY AND DIVERSE, BUT CHIEFLY UPON POETRY AND POETS. INTRODUCTORY CHAPTER. "There is Poetry that is not written. As I here use it, it is delicate perception; something which is in the nature, enabling one man to detect harmony, and know forms of beauty better than another. It is like a peculiar gift of vision, making the world we live in more visible. The poet hears music in common sounds, and sees loveliness by the wayside. There is not a change in the sky, nor a sweet human voice, which does not bring him pleasure. He sees all the light and hears all the music about him--and this is Poetry." Many thanks, O charming Mary Russell Mitford! for a short and satisfactory definition of a theme, which, when certain of our Poets essay to elucidate, dilates delectably for perusal, but fills with despair the seeker after a summary signification. Look, for instance, at that masterly and stirring reply to What is Poetry? in an Appeal for Poets from the pen of Barton;--a glorious whole, which it were gothic to garble by quotation. A marvellous creature, by the way, that Bernard Barton--worthy of love and honor! Hath Quakerism foregone its frigidness, or how came he in the cold cradle of his caste? and not he alone, but others, whom that same "frozen bosom" hath strangely quickened with poetic breath, and sent forth in poetic guise, lovely as " yellow cowslip and pale primrose from flowery lap of May." The Howitts among these, and especially Saint Mary!--where is verse more suffused by Innocency than hers, --more guileless and gladsome, --more redolent with the air of the Garden anterior to the great Mother's misdeed? How easy--were the Law one whit less inexorable--how easy to conceive a mental reservation, made in Mary's favor, by...
Read Less
Add this copy of Colloquies, Desultory and Diverse, But Chiefly Upon to cart. $46.69, good condition, Sold by Bonita rated 4.0 out of 5 stars, ships from Newport Coast, CA, UNITED STATES, published 2010 by Nabu Press.