Critical Essays on Robert BrowningMary Ellis Gibson G.K. Hall, 1992 - 275 pagina's |
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Pagina 120
... myth to the poet's elopement yet failed to notice that the similarity between the poets ' life and the myth did not end with marriage . First the chivalrous rescuer , Perseus then became devoted husband and doting father who relin ...
... myth to the poet's elopement yet failed to notice that the similarity between the poets ' life and the myth did not end with marriage . First the chivalrous rescuer , Perseus then became devoted husband and doting father who relin ...
Pagina 219
... myth / Explain who may ! " ( 100-101 ) . Instead of explaining Browning reduces the myth to its bare remaining elements , like the ruins in Fifine : Let all else go , I keep -As of a ruin just a monolith- Thus much , one verse of five ...
... myth / Explain who may ! " ( 100-101 ) . Instead of explaining Browning reduces the myth to its bare remaining elements , like the ruins in Fifine : Let all else go , I keep -As of a ruin just a monolith- Thus much , one verse of five ...
Pagina 222
... myth . Years earlier the Brownings had agreed that the dead , classical mythology should be replaced by the living Christian one - but that did not mean that they approved of David Strauss and Joseph Renan . Browning explained that in ...
... myth . Years earlier the Brownings had agreed that the dead , classical mythology should be replaced by the living Christian one - but that did not mean that they approved of David Strauss and Joseph Renan . Browning explained that in ...
Inhoudsopgave
Dramatic Monologue and the Overhearing of Lyric | 21 |
Dramatic I Poems and Their Theoretical Implications | 37 |
Victorian Poetry | 54 |
Copyright | |
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action Andromeda appears artist attempt audience authority become beginning Book Browning's called character Cleon communication complex consciousness context course critics culture death describes desire discourse discussion dramatic monologue dream early effect Elizabeth Barrett Browning English essay experience expression fact feeling female figure finally force human imagination important individual interest interpretation Italy John kind language later letter lines literary living look Lover lyric meaning mind moral myth nature never Notes object once origins person play poem poet poet's poetic poetry political Porphyria's possibility present Press primitive projection question reader reading relation remains represented response Review Robert Browning Romantic scene seems sense Sordello soul speak speaker speech stanza story Strafford structure Studies suggests thing thought turn understanding University Victorian voice whole woman writing York