Critical Essays on Robert BrowningMary Ellis Gibson G.K. Hall, 1992 - 275 pagina's |
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Pagina 48
... never - never land , but that we see it rather , through our imaginative absorption in the poet - speaker , as if in the twentieth - century present . The rape is shown us not as if told or imagined but in rigorously visual terms as if ...
... never - never land , but that we see it rather , through our imaginative absorption in the poet - speaker , as if in the twentieth - century present . The rape is shown us not as if told or imagined but in rigorously visual terms as if ...
Pagina 114
... Never to stoop " ( 1. 43 ) . The Duke , too , deanimates a Female Other who threatens his need to remain in absolute control of his rigid mental world . But this calculating aesthete , though every bit as monstrous ( and possibly more ...
... Never to stoop " ( 1. 43 ) . The Duke , too , deanimates a Female Other who threatens his need to remain in absolute control of his rigid mental world . But this calculating aesthete , though every bit as monstrous ( and possibly more ...
Pagina 245
... never to escape . Italy saved Browning from becoming just another eminent Victorian . . . . the play of his imagination was never again to be so untrammelled or so audacious as it had been when he wrote " The Bishop Orders His Tomb ...
... never to escape . Italy saved Browning from becoming just another eminent Victorian . . . . the play of his imagination was never again to be so untrammelled or so audacious as it had been when he wrote " The Bishop Orders His Tomb ...
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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