Edmund Spenser: a Critical AnthologyPaul J. Alpers Penguin Books, 1969 - 399 pagina's |
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Pagina 128
... thought , and yet to find at the same time with it the rhyme and the metre . Gellert possessed this happy gift , if ever any one of our poets possessed it ; and nothing perhaps contributed more to the great and universal impression ...
... thought , and yet to find at the same time with it the rhyme and the metre . Gellert possessed this happy gift , if ever any one of our poets possessed it ; and nothing perhaps contributed more to the great and universal impression ...
Pagina 158
... thought , one grace , one wonder at the best , Which into words no virtue can digest . ( Marlowe , 1 Tamburlaine , v ii ) Spenser at his best , has come as near to expressing this unattainable something as any other poet . He is so ...
... thought , one grace , one wonder at the best , Which into words no virtue can digest . ( Marlowe , 1 Tamburlaine , v ii ) Spenser at his best , has come as near to expressing this unattainable something as any other poet . He is so ...
Pagina 252
... thought that the objects of his desire were merely ' ideals ' , private , subjective , constructions of his own mind , then the actual world might have thrown doubt on those ideals . But he thought no such thing . The Existentialist ...
... thought that the objects of his desire were merely ' ideals ' , private , subjective , constructions of his own mind , then the actual world might have thrown doubt on those ideals . But he thought no such thing . The Existentialist ...
Inhoudsopgave
Preface | 11 |
Part One Contemporaneous Criticism | 17 |
E K | 26 |
Copyright | |
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action adventures allegory appear Arthur beauty becomes beginning better Book Bower Britomart called canto character clear comes common course criticism death described desire eclogues effect Elizabethan English example excellent experience expression fable fact Faerie Queene faire feel figure final give grace hand human idea imagination important interest Italy kind knight lady language learned less living look lost matter meaning mind moral nature never object once particular passage passion pastoral perhaps person poem poet poetic poetry present Press Proem reader reason represents seems sense Spenser spirit stanza story structure style suggests symbolic things thought tradition true truth turn University verse virtue vision whole writing