A Literary History of EnglandLongmans, Green and Company, 1929 - 392 pagina's |
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Pagina 84
... Ben Jonson , indeed , admitted that Shakespeare was without a rival ; but some preferred Jonson himself ; others upheld the claims of Fletcher to be at least the equal of both . Time has so altered these views that many readers would ...
... Ben Jonson , indeed , admitted that Shakespeare was without a rival ; but some preferred Jonson himself ; others upheld the claims of Fletcher to be at least the equal of both . Time has so altered these views that many readers would ...
Pagina 85
... Ben Jonson ( 1573 ? -1637 ) lay principally in comedy . He studied the manners of his time with the keen eye of the social satirist . His favourite characters are men dominated by “ humours , " a word to be used , he tells us , when ...
... Ben Jonson ( 1573 ? -1637 ) lay principally in comedy . He studied the manners of his time with the keen eye of the social satirist . His favourite characters are men dominated by “ humours , " a word to be used , he tells us , when ...
Pagina 129
... Ben Jonson's " Drink to me only with thine eyes . " But convention is the foe to individuality ; and it was chiefly in individuality that the love - lyric gained during the early seventeenth century . Jonson himself had sometimes ...
... Ben Jonson's " Drink to me only with thine eyes . " But convention is the foe to individuality ; and it was chiefly in individuality that the love - lyric gained during the early seventeenth century . Jonson himself had sometimes ...
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admiration Anglo-Saxon appeared beauty Beelzebub began Ben Jonson blank verse Byron cęsura career character charm Chaucer chief Church Coleridge Commodus couplet criticism death delight drama dream Dryden Elizabethan England English English poetry epic essays expression Faerie Queene Falstaff feeling fiction French Revolution genius give greatest heart heroic couplet honour human humour imagination instance Jane Austen Johnson Keats King Lady language lines literary literature living lyrical Lyrical Ballads manner master metre Milton mind narrative nature never novel novelist Paradise Lost passages passion perhaps Pindaric play poem poet poet's poetic poetry political Pope praise prose qualities reader rhyme romance satire scenes Scott sense Shakespeare Shelley sonnets speeches Spenser spirit stanza story style Swift taste Tennyson thee things thou thought tragedy verse Victorian Whig whole words Wordsworth writers written wrote