Homage to John Dryden: Three Essays on Poetry of the Seventeenth CenturyLeonard and Virginia Woolf at the Hogarth Press, 1924 - 46 σελίδες |
Άλλες εκδόσεις - Προβολή όλων
Συχνά εμφανιζόμενοι όροι και φράσεις
Aurelian Townshend Baudelaire Ben Jonson Bishop King Book of English Catullus Chapman comparison confused with cynicism Coy Mistress Crashaw criticism débâcles nuptiales define metaphysical poetry difference Donne Doren doth Dryden and Pope Dryden lacked effect eighteenth centuries Elizabethan emotion English poetry English Verse enjoy Dryden erudition essay on Cowley experience fancy Fawn feeling Gray and Collins Herbert's Ode images induces variety isolate this quality JOHN DRYDEN Johnson Keats Laforgue language lines literary Lord Herbert Lucretius MacFlecknoe magni magnificent magniloquence Milton and Dryden mind Morris Nymph object Ovid Oxford Book passage perhaps phrase poem poetic precise prosaic prose pure Puritan refined result is poetry ridiculous rose sensi seventeenth century Shakespeare Shelley simile slight soul Swinburne T. S. ELIOT taste tear tender voices try Tennyson and Browning thee thing thought UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN variety of hell verse of Marvell VIRGINIA WOOLF virtue William Morris wit of Dryden
Δημοφιλή αποσπάσματα
Σελίδα 14 - The world's great age begins anew, The golden years return, The earth doth like a snake renew Her winter weeds outworn: Heaven smiles, and faiths and empires gleam Like wrecks of a dissolving dream.
Σελίδα 18 - A fiery soul, which, working out its way, Fretted the pigmy body to decay, And o'er-informed the tenement of clay...
Σελίδα 22 - FAREWELL, too little, and too lately known, Whom I began to think, and call my own ; For sure our souls were near allied, and thine Cast in the same poetic mould with mine.
Σελίδα 26 - He left the name, at which the world grew pale, To point a moral, or adorn a tale.
Σελίδα 44 - Tis madness to resist or blame The face of angry heaven's flame ; And if we would speak true, Much to the Man is due Who, from his private gardens, where He lived reserved and austere (As if his highest plot To plant the bergamot) Could by industrious valour climb To ruin the great work of time, And cast the Kingdoms old Into another mould.
Σελίδα 37 - TO HIS COY MISTRESS HAD we but world enough, and time, This coyness, lady, were no crime. We would sit down, and think which way To walk, and pass our long love's day. Thou by the Indian Ganges' side Shouldst rubies find: I by the tide Of Humber would complain. I would Love you ten years before the flood, And you should, if you please, refuse Till the conversion of the Jews; My vegetable...
Σελίδα 43 - What the unsearchable dispose Of highest Wisdom brings about, And ever best found in the close. Oft he seems to hide his face, But unexpectedly returns, And to his faithful champion hath in place Bore witness gloriously...
Σελίδα 18 - The country rings around with loud alarms, And raw in fields the rude militia swarms; Mouths without hands; maintained at vast expense, In peace a charge, in war a weak defence; Stout once a month they march, a blustering band, And ever, but in times of need, at hand...
Σελίδα 37 - But at my back I always hear Time's winged chariot hurrying near; And yonder all before us lie Deserts of vast eternity.
Σελίδα 40 - And sends the fowls to us in care On daily visits through the air. He hangs in shades the orange bright Like golden lamps in a green night, And does in the pomegranates close Jewels more rich than Ormus shows.