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Sigworth, Oliver F. William Collins. New York: Twayne, 1965. This is a very good introduction to the life and work of Collins. Lodged between a biographical account of Collins and a long treatment ...
William Collins was born at Chichester in Sussex in December, 1721. His early years seem to have been those of a favored child. Whether Collins attended a school or learned his first letters at ...
All in all, evening is given a very feminine identity as it was often considered in Collins’ day. Evening is the opposite of the masculine day with its “bright-haired sun.”. Instead, she is ...
The Poetical Works of Mr. William Collins: With Memoirs of the Author; and Observations on His Genius and Writings (poetry) 1765 ***An Ode on the Popular Superstitions of the Highlands of Scotland ...
The theme of William Collins' poem "How Sleep the Brave" is the honor and respect paid to soldiers who sacrificed their lives for their country. Collins uses nature and angelic imagery to ...
Most critics compare Collins favorably with his contemporaries, especially with Thomas Gray, generally agreeing with William Hazlitt’s assessment. Hazlitt argued that Collins possessed genuine ...
Collins’ verse exhibits at least five recurring themes. First, Collins is concerned with the role of fancy or imagination in poetry. He feels that fancy rather than reason, in the eighteenth ...
Discussion of themes and motifs in William Collins's Ode to Evening. eNotes critical analyses help you gain a deeper understanding of Ode to Evening so you can excel on your essay or test.
In lyrical verse, the English poet William Collins praises the night sky in his “Ode to Evening.” First published in 1746, this ode was part of the then-budding Romantic literary tradition and ...
2 William Collins, Drafts & Fragments of Verse, ed. J. S. Cunningham, Oxford, 1956. Quotations from this edition are made by permission of the Clarendon Press.