Word: shelleys
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...Lect. Hall Mr. Hawkes, Sec. 4 New Lect. Hall Mr. Henry, Sec. 7 New Lect. Hall Dr. Herrick, Sec. 1, 14 Sever 36 Mr. Holske, Sec. 9 Memorial Hall Dr. Howe, Sec. 5 Memorial Hall Mr. Metcalf, Sec. 8 Memorial Hall Mr. Phelps, Sec. 3, 12 Memorial Hall Mr. Shelley, Sec. 13, 16 Memorial Hall Mr. Stamm, Sec. 10, 11 Memorial Hall Government 24 Emerson 211 History 53a Sever 2 Indic Philology 3 Emerson 211 Sociology 6 Emerson 211 2 P. M. (XVIII) Engin. Sciences 1b Pierce 302 Engin. Sciences 3b Robinson Annex THURSDAY, JUNE 15 (XVI) Economics 7b Harvard...
...previous lectures he has discussed poetry and criticism of the Elizabethan days, during the Restoration period, and of the early days of Romanticism. His last lecture, delivered February 17, criticized the romanticists, especially Shelley and Keats, for forgetting verse in sociological zeal...
...Shelley were living today he would do well to send his poems to the Criterion, for which they might be accepted, with much shortening and editing," the poet said. Mr. Eliot makes his home in London, where he is the editor of the Criterion, a literary quarterly, and has publishing interests...
...contemporaries, can develop his own more poetical ideas of life and death, knowing that his readers will not be struggling, or disagreeing with his politics or religion, and so disposing with dogmas both he and his readers can concentrate on poetry," the lecturer continued. He showed that Shelley, instead of being an 'orthodox' atheist, postulated a religion of his own, which made for obscurity, immaturity, and didacticism in his poetry. As for his politics and philosophy, Shelley "never escaped from the teaching of Godwin, and I have no doubt Mrs. Shelley was also too much of a 'heavyweight!' Shelley...
...Shelley was usually thinkink what he thought he ought to think and felt what he thought he ought to feel," Mr. Eliot stated, in contradiction to those who affirm the Arielesque spontaneity of the poet. "Hence, the greatest passages in his poetry are the ones which contain none of his 'revolutionary' political and social beliefs. Revolution has produced an adolescent and incoherent poet in Shelley since he was too occupied with his ideas on free-love...