A Literary History of EnglandLongmans, Green and Company, 1929 - 392 pagina's |
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Pagina 241
... poetic language that Wordsworth most evidently exaggerates his case . So zealous is he for purity of diction , so opposed to the " gaudiness and inane phraseology " then often affected , that he will allow poetry no claim to a ...
... poetic language that Wordsworth most evidently exaggerates his case . So zealous is he for purity of diction , so opposed to the " gaudiness and inane phraseology " then often affected , that he will allow poetry no claim to a ...
Pagina 334
... poetic diction ; but he gave a new turn to familiar words . In his hands , language of Biblical simplicity is invested with a new poetic impressiveness . He can tune it to many emotions : in this stanza he gives it the accent of ...
... poetic diction ; but he gave a new turn to familiar words . In his hands , language of Biblical simplicity is invested with a new poetic impressiveness . He can tune it to many emotions : in this stanza he gives it the accent of ...
Pagina 366
... poet's love of expressive words . He endeavours , like Keats , to " load every rift with ore , " but he does so entirely in his own way , and he is the creator of an original poetic style . His effective use of proper names - Samarkhand ...
... poet's love of expressive words . He endeavours , like Keats , to " load every rift with ore , " but he does so entirely in his own way , and he is the creator of an original poetic style . His effective use of proper names - Samarkhand ...
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
admiration Anglo-Saxon appeared beauty began Ben Jonson Beowulf blank verse Byron cæsura Canterbury Tales career century character charm Chaucer chief Church Coleridge comedy couplet criticism death decasyllabic delight drama dream Dryden early Elizabethan England English English poetry epic essays expression Faerie Queene Falstaff feeling fiction genius give greatest heart heroic couplet honour human humour imagination instance Jane Eyre Johnson Keats King language later lines literary literature living lyrical manner master metre Milton mind narrative nature never novel novelist Paradise Lost passages passion perhaps play poem poet poet's poetic poetry political Pope prose qualities reader Renaissance rhyme romance satire scenes sense Shakespeare Shelley skill sonnets Spenser spirit stanza story style taste Tennyson things thou thought tragedy true Vanity Fair verse Victorian Whig whole wholly words Wordsworth writers written wrote