Some attempts to give reasons for my judgements hopefuly take my words beyond the range of pointless blurp..

Well, the interesting Frenchmen who killed themselves interestingly weren't Romantics, either, so the whole thing is in doubt, innit?Europa wrote:But I thought...
http://www.the-sisters-of-mercy.com/gen ... wlmisc.htm
FAVOURITE ROMANTIC POETS
none; they're all rubbish (unless we're talking about loony Frenchmen who at least killed themselves interestingly)
He's not being inconsistent surely
Just to be pedantic, TC only references the line ("On the loan and on the level ...still on the floor); it's Dominion that quotes it.Quiff Boy wrote: "The lone and level sands stretch far away"
this corrosion quotes this almost word for word.
Ozymandias by Horace Smith (who later retitled it "On A Stupendous Leg of Granite, Discovered Standing by Itself in the Deserts of Egypt, with the Inscription Inserted Below"), written in competition with Shelley and published a month later in the same magazine.MrChris wrote:Eh? I liked that, but what was it?
As it hasn't actually been mentioned yet, it's worth pointing out that the statue was of Ramesses II, Osymandias being a Greek transliteration of part of his name.Black Dahlia wrote:The statue that inspired Shelley is in the Karnak Temple in Luxor. Ive actually seen it and its pretty impressive.
… like an architect of words…eotunun wrote:Mainly, I went into details for why.
Some attempts to give reasons for my judgements hopefuly take my words beyond the range of pointless blurp..
No, that's a greenhouse or a glasshouse. A lighthouse is a structure that shines a powerful beam of light to warn ships away from rocks or treacherous areas of water and coastline.eotunun wrote:a lighthouse, which is a transparent building meant to collect light.