The Pelican Guide to English Literature, 4. kötetBoris Ford Penguin Books, 1962 |
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252. oldal
... passage is often missed . By Pope's time , for good or ill , our culture had become pervasively literary ; except for ridicule , poets had dismissed from their repertoire the vernacular phraseology which often makes the poetry of ...
... passage is often missed . By Pope's time , for good or ill , our culture had become pervasively literary ; except for ridicule , poets had dismissed from their repertoire the vernacular phraseology which often makes the poetry of ...
389. oldal
... passage we move from a diluted form of the Augustan- social mode to an anticipation of the Romantic - natural . The rest of the book meanders from topic to topic : description of landscape , the life of the country poor , ' artificial ...
... passage we move from a diluted form of the Augustan- social mode to an anticipation of the Romantic - natural . The rest of the book meanders from topic to topic : description of landscape , the life of the country poor , ' artificial ...
393. oldal
... passage is extremely readable , but it cannot be said that the situation is clarified by any brilliant image or the ... passage - ' knees and hassocks are well - nigh divorc'd ' and the household words , ' God made the country , and man ...
... passage is extremely readable , but it cannot be said that the situation is clarified by any brilliant image or the ... passage - ' knees and hassocks are well - nigh divorc'd ' and the household words , ' God made the country , and man ...
Gyakori szavak és kifejezések
Addison admiration Augustan Augustan literature Augustan poetry beauty Cambridge character Clarissa classical comic Congreve contemporary couplet Cowper criticism Crusoe Defoe Defoe's Dobrée Dr Johnson drama dramatist Dryden Dunciad Eighteenth Century Elizabethan England Essays expression F. R. Leavis F. W. Bateson feeling Fielding's Goldsmith Grongar Hill heroic History Hogarth Horace Hudibras human ideas imagination imitation intellectual interest John judgement kind Lady language less Letters literary living London manner mind modern Moll Flanders moral nature novel novelist Oxford Pamela passage passion period philosophy phrase play pleasure poem poet poetic poetry political Pope Pope's praise Preface prose reader reason Restoration comedy rhymes Richardson Romantic Samuel Richardson satire scene sense seventeenth century Shakespeare Shandy Smollett social society Spectator Studies style Swift taste things thought tion Tom Jones tradition Tristram Shandy truth Vanbrugh verse virtue vols William William Hogarth words writing wrote York