Poems for Study: A Critical and Historical Introduction, Τόμος 1Rinehart, 1953 - 743 σελίδες |
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Σελίδα 47
... play Magnyfycence is in this tradition . The following is a typical passage from the play : I blunder , I bluster , I blowe , and I blother ; I make one the one day , and I marre on the other ; Bysy , bysy , and euer bysy , I daunce vp ...
... play Magnyfycence is in this tradition . The following is a typical passage from the play : I blunder , I bluster , I blowe , and I blother ; I make one the one day , and I marre on the other ; Bysy , bysy , and euer bysy , I daunce vp ...
Σελίδα 60
... play with them and exploit them with a kind of exuberance . But , on the other hand , as Bateson suggests , they may have been unsure of their vocabularies , unsure , for example , that a given word would still be in use after a few ...
... play with them and exploit them with a kind of exuberance . But , on the other hand , as Bateson suggests , they may have been unsure of their vocabularies , unsure , for example , that a given word would still be in use after a few ...
Σελίδα 234
... played around his face . As Hannibal did to the altars come , Sworn by his sire a mortal foe to Rome ; So Sh- swore , nor should his vow be vain , 9. Maximum , in Dryden's Tyrannic Love , defies the gods . cobbler in a lost play . II ...
... played around his face . As Hannibal did to the altars come , Sworn by his sire a mortal foe to Rome ; So Sh- swore , nor should his vow be vain , 9. Maximum , in Dryden's Tyrannic Love , defies the gods . cobbler in a lost play . II ...
Περιεχόμενα
General | 3 |
John Skelton c 14601529 | 39 |
Sir Thomas Wyatt 15031542 | 52 |
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Συχνά εμφανιζόμενοι όροι και φράσεις
Andrew Marvell Annabel Lee beauty bird breath bright caesura cloud couplet Danny Deever dark dead death deep delight Donne's doth dream Dryden earth Eliot eternal eyes F. R. LEAVIS F. W. Bateson face fair fall fear feel flowers grief hand hath hear heart heaven human iambic pentameter imagery imagination Keats language leaves light literary live look Lord lover Lycidas meaning metaphor metaphysical poets Milton mind moon morning nature neoclassical never night o'er passion poem poet poetic poetry praise rhyme rhythm sense shine sigh sing sleep song sonnet soul sound spirit stanza stars statement strong Suggested Readings sweet symbol T. S. Eliot tears thee theme thine things thou art thought tone Ulalume verse voice W. H. Auden Wallace Stevens waves weep wild wind woods words Wordsworth ΙΟ