Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Hymn to Intellectual Beauty" ¶ 1
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Hymn and Intellectual
However, Shelley's version of Jupiter is unable to overwhelm the will of Prometheus, and Shelley gives the power of reason and conscience to his God: the Unseen Power of Hymn to Intellectual Beauty.
" Hymn to Intellectual Beauty " appeared in Rosalind and Helen, 1819.
" Hymn to Intellectual Beauty " was written during the summer of 1816 while Percy and Mary Shelley stayed with Lord Byron near Lake Geneva, Switzerland.
" Hymn to Intellectual Beauty " is an 84-line ode that was influenced by Jean-Jacques Rousseau's novel of sensibility Julie, or the New Heloise and William Wordsworth's " Ode: Intimations of Immortality ".
The origins of Shelley's understanding of Beauty and how to attain it can be found within " Hymn to Intellectual Beauty ".
The " Hymn to Intellectual Beauty " was conceived and written during a boating excursion with Byron on Lake Geneva, Switzerland, in June, 1816.
The central idea of " Hymn to Intellectual Beauty " is that there is a spiritual power that stands apart from both the physical world and the heart of man.
" Power and the Poet: Religious Mythmaking in Shelley's ' Hymn to Intellectual Beauty '.
" Interpretation and Value in ' Mont Blanc ' and ' Hymn to Intellectual Beauty '.
" The Spirit of Classical Hymn in Shelley's ' Hymn to Intellectual Beauty '.
" The Poet as Ironist in ' Mont Blanc ' and ' Hymn to Intellectual Beauty '.
" Shelley's ' Hymn to Intellectual Beauty '.
" Hymn to Intellectual Beauty " in Shelley's Prose and Poetry, 2nd ed., Ed.
* Watson, J. R. " Shelley's ' Hymn to Intellectual Beauty ' and the Romantic Hymn.

Hymn and Beauty
Proserpina's figure inspired many artistic compositions, eminently in sculpture ( Bernini, see The Rape of Proserpina ( Bernini ) ) in painting ( D. G. Rossetti, a fresco by Pomarancio, J. Heintz, A. Durer, Dell ' Abbate, M. Parrish ) and in literature ( Goethe's Proserpina and Swinburne's Hymn to Proserpine and The Garden of Proserpine ) The statue of the Rape of Prosepina by Pluto that stands in the Great Garden ( more correctly, Großer Garten ) of Dresden, Germany is also referred to as " Time Ravages Beauty ".
Edmund Spenser wrote his Hymn of Heavenly Beauty using rhyme royal but he also derived his own Spenserian stanza with the rhyme scheme a-b-a-b-b-c-b-c-c partly by adapting rhyme royal.

Hymn and is
The story is told in the Homeric Hymn to Hermes.
" Hymn to Proserpine " is a poem by Algernon Charles Swinburne, published in 1866.
This book is either used as a supplement to the more traditional Hymn Book or is used in place of the traditional Hymn Book.
Arya tribes charged into battle to the beating of the war drum and chanting of a hymn that appears in Book VI of the Rig Veda and also the Atharva Veda where it is referred to as the " Hymn to the battle drum ".
The epithet is connected with dolphins ( Greek δελφίς ,- ῖνος ) in the Homeric Hymn to Apollo ( line 400 ), recounting the legend of how Apollo first came to Delphi in the shape of a dolphin, carrying Cretan priests on his back.
The melody in this movement is also termed the " Emperor's Hymn.
In addition to some language derived from the New Testament in the liturgy itself ( e. g., the Trisagion may be based on Apocalypse 4: 8, and the beginning of the " Hymn of Praise " draws upon Luke 2: 14 ), the reading of extended passages from the New Testament is a practice common to almost all Christian worship, liturgical or not.
* Battle Hymn ( 1956 ) is based on the real-life experiences of Lt Col Dean E. Hess, USAF ( played by Rock Hudson ) and his cadre of U. S. Air Force instructors in the early days of the Korean War, training the pilots of the Republic of Korea Air Force and leading them during their first missions in F-51D / F-51Ks.
There is a single complete poem, Fragment 1, the Hymn to Aphrodite, quoted in its entirety as a model of the " polished and exuberant " style of composition by Dionysius of Halicarnassus, with admiration of its consummate artistry:
In formal terms it is a hymn invoking Zeus and the Muses: parallel passages between it and the much shorter Homeric Hymn to the Muses make it clear that the Theogony developed out of a tradition of hymnic preludes with which an ancient Greek rhapsode would begin his performance at poetic competitions.
* February 1 – American Civil War: Julia Ward Howe's Battle Hymn of the Republic is published for the first time in the Atlantic Monthly.
The School Hymn is also used in other Schools in Hong Kong:
The syncretism is readily apparent in the Great Hymn to the Aten in which Re-Herakhty, Shu and Aten are merged into the creator god.
The most complete ancient Egyptian account of the myth is the Great Hymn to Osiris, an inscription from the Eighteenth Dynasty ( c. 1550 – 1292 BC ) that gives the general outline of the entire story but includes little detail.
In the Homeric Hymn to Demeter, King Celeus is said to have been one of the first people to learn the secret rites and mysteries of her cult.
The earliest account of the origin of the Delphic oracle is provided in the Homeric Hymn to Delphic Apollo, which recent scholarship dates within a narrow range, ca.
Mameli is mostly known as the author of the lyrics of the Italian national anthem, Il Canto degli Italiani ( music by Michele Novaro ), better known in Italy as Inno di Mameli ( Mameli's Hymn ).
Akhnaten's Hymn to the Sun is sung in the language of the audience.
* Hymn to Apollo is written and inscribed on stone in Delphi ; it is the earliest surviving notated music, in a substantial and legible fragment, in the western world.
Nowhere amongst us is the mystic relation of the seed-corn of Demeter, whose poignant grief for her daughter threatens to bring famine on mankind ( Hymn to Cer.

Hymn and poem
According to legend, the publication of his poem Hymn to the Pillory caused his audience at the pillory to throw flowers instead of the customary harmful and noxious objects and to drink to his health.
The phrase introduces the 1866 poem Hymn to Proserpine, which was Algernon Charles Swinburne's elaboration of what a philosophic pagan might have felt at the triumph of Christianity.
The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle otherwise proves significant to study of the era, preserving a chronology of early English history, while the poem Cædmon's Hymn from the 7th century survives as the oldest extant work of literature in English.
Some of the most important surviving works of Old English literature are Beowulf, an epic poem ; the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, a record of early English history ; the Franks Casket, an early whalebone artefact ; and Caedmon's Hymn, a Christian religious poem.
The metaphor of a pearl appears in the longer Hymn of the Pearl, a poem respected for its high literary quality, and use of layered theological metaphor, found within one of the texts of Gnosticism.
In the poem A Hymn to God the Father, John Donne, married to Anne More, reportedly puns repeatedly: " Son / sun " in the second quoted line, and two compound puns on " Donne / done " and " More / more ".
Many of Heidegger's works from the 1930s onwards include meditations on lines from Hölderlin's poetry, and several of the lecture courses are devoted to the reading of a single poem ( see, for example, Hölderlin's Hymn " The Ister ").
In his poem " Great Hymn to the Aten ", Akhenaten praises Aten as the creator, and giver of life.
* Julia Ward Howe ( 1819 – 1910 ), wrote poem that became the Battle Hymn of the Republic
Cædmon's only known surviving work is Cædmon's Hymn, the nine-line alliterative vernacular praise poem in honour of God which he supposedly learned to sing in his initial dream.
The first-known poem in English by a Welshman was Hymn to the Virgin written c. 1470 by Ieuan ap Hywel Swrdwal.
The Hymn to Liberty or Hymn to Freedom (, Ýmnos is tin Eleftherían ) is a poem written by Dionýsios Solomós in 1823 that consists of 158 stanzas, which is used as the national anthem of Greece.
The Finlandia Hymn ( in Finnish Finlandia-hymni ) refers to a serene hymn-like section of the patriotic symphonic poem Finlandia, written in 1899 and 1900 by the Finnish composer Jean Sibelius.
Embedded in the Acts of Thomas at different places according to differing manuscript traditions is a Syriac hymn, The Hymn of the Pearl, ( or Hymn of the Soul ), a poem that gained a great deal of popularity in mainstream Christian circles.
" Lift Every Voice and Sing " — often called " The Negro National Hymn ", " The Negro National Anthem ", " The Black National Anthem ", or " The African-American National Anthem "— is a song written as a poem by James Weldon Johnson ( 1871 – 1938 ) and set to music by his brother John Rosamond Johnson ( 1873 – 1954 ) in 1900.
He wrote the present text for the hymn I Vow to Thee My Country, which can now be found in many British Hymn books, revising a poem of his own, about the same time.
He is author of the Hymn to the Tree ( Himno al Arbol ) a well known Spanish poem later made a song in several Latin-American countries.
The tragic event of the destruction of Psara inspired the poet Dionysios Solomos — the author of the Hymn to Liberty — to write a poem about it called " The Destruction of Psara ".
Willow's dream opens with Willow painting Sappho's love poem, Hymn to Aphrodite, in Greek onto Tara's back.
* Finlandia Hymn, a section of the Sibelius symphonic poem Finlandia

0.200 seconds.