English Literature: A Critical SurveyPitman, 1951 - 316 pagina's |
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Pagina 23
... close your eyes with holy dread , For he on honey - dew hath fed And drunk the milk of paradise . It is not to be supposed that Coleridge wrought consciously to achieve these effects . He was guided rather by his intuitive feeling for ...
... close your eyes with holy dread , For he on honey - dew hath fed And drunk the milk of paradise . It is not to be supposed that Coleridge wrought consciously to achieve these effects . He was guided rather by his intuitive feeling for ...
Pagina 33
... close contact with elemental things . Virgil's love of the countryside was genuine , notwithstanding the fact that the literary form he adopted was a convention . The pastoral achieved a wide popularity in Italy and France in the early ...
... close contact with elemental things . Virgil's love of the countryside was genuine , notwithstanding the fact that the literary form he adopted was a convention . The pastoral achieved a wide popularity in Italy and France in the early ...
Pagina 181
... close , we so often find a dénouement which is psychologically absurd . This lack of psychological truth is shown also in other ways , e.g. the holding up of the action for indulgence in word - quibbles , rhetorical speeches or ...
... close , we so often find a dénouement which is psychologically absurd . This lack of psychological truth is shown also in other ways , e.g. the holding up of the action for indulgence in word - quibbles , rhetorical speeches or ...
Inhoudsopgave
LITERATURE AS AN | 1 |
THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE | 11 |
DESIGN IN POETRY | 20 |
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aesthetic ancient artist Ballads beauty Ben Jonson blank verse born Byron century characters Chaucer Chaucerian stanza chronicle play classical Coleridge comedy contemporary conventional couplet criticism diction drama dramatist Dryden E. K. CHAMBERS early Elizabethan emotions England English poetry epic Essay Euphuistic example expression feeling French FURTHER READING G. K. Chesterton genius Greek heroic heroic couplet human humour imagination Italian Jane Austen John Jonson kind King language Latin lines literary lyrical manner medieval metre metrical Milton mind modern mood moral narrative nature novel novelist Oxford Univ passage pastoral pattern philosophical plays poem poet poetic popular principle prose prosody Renaissance rhyme rhythm romantic romanticism satire Shakespeare Shelley sonnet speech Spenser spirit Sprung Rhythm stage stanza story stress style SUGGESTIONS FOR FURTHER syllables T. S. Eliot taste Tennyson theatre theme Thomas thought tion tradition tragedy Victorian words Wordsworth writing written wrote