Studies in Philology, Volume 4University of North Carolina Press, 1963 |
Vanuit het boek
Resultaten 1-3 van 5
Pagina 65
... effect and the nearest approach to a conversational style would not tolerate this lyrical device . Perhaps these examples will illustrate clearly enough Tennyson's different methods in his use of the dramatic mono- logue . He was the ...
... effect and the nearest approach to a conversational style would not tolerate this lyrical device . Perhaps these examples will illustrate clearly enough Tennyson's different methods in his use of the dramatic mono- logue . He was the ...
Pagina 67
... effect it gives to the whole . Form is no longer second- ary , but vital . It is the polishing of the gem that reveals the beauty of the stone to the best advantage . The dramatic monologue is now an artistic production in whose ...
... effect it gives to the whole . Form is no longer second- ary , but vital . It is the polishing of the gem that reveals the beauty of the stone to the best advantage . The dramatic monologue is now an artistic production in whose ...
Pagina 84
... effect- ive than that of having the poet speak for the objects . All of Kipling's ballads are written as dialect monologues . Tommy , one of the most noted of these , expresses from the soldier's standpoint the English disrespect for ...
... effect- ive than that of having the poet speak for the objects . All of Kipling's ballads are written as dialect monologues . Tommy , one of the most noted of these , expresses from the soldier's standpoint the English disrespect for ...
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
Alphonso Smith Andrea del Sarto Antony Arnold Smith art of construction artistic attitude Bret Browning Browning's century character portrayal characteristic Clara Vere cobbler conjunction conscious art considered contribution dialect dramatic mono dramatic monologue form dramatic occasion dramatic spirit Edmund Gosse Einenkel elements ellipsis English Literature English Lyric Poetry epic essential example expression form of poetry gerund give Grammatik greatest Henry VIII idiom illustrate individual influence interest Jephtha's Daughter Last Duchess literary logue London love lyric Love's Labor's Lost lover Lucrece Main Tendencies Mätzner ment method natural Othello participle group Patriot period person poem poet present relation reveals Richard II says selected Shakespeare short story sion sonnet speak speaker and hearer stage struction style subordinate clause Tendencies of Victorian Tennyson thee thou thoughts and emotions three constituent tion Troilus Twelfth Night type of poetry University of North Vere de Vere Victorian age Victorian Poetry wife Winter's Tale words writer