 | Edwin Paxton Hood - 1856 - 556 sider
...contempt for him, used to rebut the testimony of Blackwood by one constant reply — 'Ay, Blackwo<xi praises Wordsworth, but who else praises him ? ' In...scorn pointed at it in 1802 by the first or second No. of the Edinburgh Review, failed to reach its mark from absolute defect of knowledge in the public... | |
 | Thomas De Quincey, David Masson - 1896 - 472 sider
...a profound contempt for him, used to rebut the testimony of Blackwood by one constant reply—"Ay, Blackwood praises Wordsworth, but who else praises...unknown; and the finger of scorn, pointed at it in 1802 bj the first or second number of the Edinburgh Review, failed to reach its mark from absolute defect... | |
 | Thomas De Quincey, David Masson - 1896 - 470 sider
...contempt for him, used to rebut the testimony of Blackwood by one constant reply — -" Ay, Blackwod praises Wordsworth, but who else praises him?" In...unknown; and the finger of scorn, pointed at it in 1802 bj the first or second number of the Edinburgh Review, failed to reach its mark from absolute defect... | |
 | Doris Eveline Faulkner Jones - 1982 - 244 sider
...generation." De Quincey, in 1835, said : "Up to 1820, the name of Wordsworth was trampled underfoot ; from 1820 to 1830, it was militant ; from 1830 to 1835, it has been triumphant." Tennyson's influence was more immediate, and therefore more overwhelming, than Wordsworth's ; each... | |
 | Kenneth R. Johnston, Kenneth R.. Johnston - 1998 - 1018 sider
...accordingly, as De Quincey aptly noted, "Up to 1820 the name of Wordsworth was trampled underfoot; from 1820 to 1830 it was militant; from 1830 to 1835 it has been triumphant." And the triumph continued: in 1838 Wordsworth was awarded the DCL at the University of Durham, and... | |
 | Felicia Hemans - 2002 - 506 sider
...the critic Thomas De Quincey claimed that "Up to 1820 the name of Wordsworth was trampled underfoot; from 1820 to 1830 it was militant; from 1830 to 1835 it has been triumphant."4 More important, in her work Hemans reconstructs Wordsworth in her own interests,5 and... | |
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