The Tutorial History of English LiteratureUniversity Tutorial Press, 1954 - 294 oldal |
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92. oldal
Alfred John Wyatt. verse . 6 " " In Paradise Lost ' Milton is our greatest artist , one might almost say architect , in blank verse . His blank But in order fully to appreciate the art and distinction of Miltonic blank verse some pre ...
Alfred John Wyatt. verse . 6 " " In Paradise Lost ' Milton is our greatest artist , one might almost say architect , in blank verse . His blank But in order fully to appreciate the art and distinction of Miltonic blank verse some pre ...
119. oldal
... verse I chose , As fittest for discourse and nearest prose . ' Again in the Preface to his Fables , ' he writes : ' my only difficulty is to run them into verse or to give them the other harmony of prose . ' Pope uses almost identical ...
... verse I chose , As fittest for discourse and nearest prose . ' Again in the Preface to his Fables , ' he writes : ' my only difficulty is to run them into verse or to give them the other harmony of prose . ' Pope uses almost identical ...
172. oldal
... verse , and had no more sympathy with the forms of verse that Collins and Gray had introduced or with those of earlier English poetry than Johnson himself . The latter ridiculed them reaction . in verse : ' All is strange , yet nothing ...
... verse , and had no more sympathy with the forms of verse that Collins and Gray had introduced or with those of earlier English poetry than Johnson himself . The latter ridiculed them reaction . in verse : ' All is strange , yet nothing ...
Tartalomjegyzék
BEFORE THE CONQUEST 1066 A D | 1 |
CHAPTER | 8 |
CHAPTER III | 26 |
9 további fejezet nem látható
Más kiadások - Összes megtekintése
Gyakori szavak és kifejezések
Addison allegory Ballads beauty Beowulf blank verse called Canterbury Tales character characteristic Chaucer Classic Coleridge comedy contemporary couplet criticism death Defoe Dickens drama Dryden eighteenth century Elizabethan England English literature English poetry Epicene Essay expression eyes Faery Faery Queen Faustus feeling fiction genius give Gorboduc greatest hand heart heaven heroic couplets humour imitation influence Johnson king Kipling language later lines literary live Lord lyric Lyrical Ballads Marlowe Matthew Arnold metre Milton moral mother nature never night novel Paradise Lost passage passion perfect period plays poem poet poetic Pope Pope's prose reader Romantic Romantic poetry Rudyard Kipling satire says scene sense Shakespeare Shelley song sonnet soul Spenser spirit stanza story style Tamburlaine Tennyson thee things thou thought tragedy truth versification Wee Willie Winkie Welcum whole wonderful words Wordsworth writing wrote Wyatt