John Dryden and the Poetry of StatementUniversity of Queensland Press, 1967 - 193 pagina's |
Vanuit het boek
Resultaten 1-3 van 16
Pagina 30
... apparent ; and the total rhythmic pattern of Religio Laici , shown in the previous discussion as working parallel to the pattern of ideas or argu- ment , is one that is determined by an interaction of prose , or speech rhythms , in ...
... apparent ; and the total rhythmic pattern of Religio Laici , shown in the previous discussion as working parallel to the pattern of ideas or argu- ment , is one that is determined by an interaction of prose , or speech rhythms , in ...
Pagina 45
... apparent than real , and the same might be said of the passage as poetry of statement . It still means what it does say directly , and the poetic elements in it still co - operate with , still imitate this meaning . But if , as Van ...
... apparent than real , and the same might be said of the passage as poetry of statement . It still means what it does say directly , and the poetic elements in it still co - operate with , still imitate this meaning . But if , as Van ...
Pagina 132
... apparent unselfconscious simplicity of expression . Indeed it would seem that only verse that has this apparent extreme simplicity can unobtrusively carry such repetition . Compare with Dryden's , for example , these lines from Words ...
... apparent unselfconscious simplicity of expression . Indeed it would seem that only verse that has this apparent extreme simplicity can unobtrusively carry such repetition . Compare with Dryden's , for example , these lines from Words ...
Inhoudsopgave
Introduction | 1 |
Chapter one Imitation | 21 |
Chapter two Meaning | 38 |
6 andere gedeelten niet getoond
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
Absalom and Achitophel achieved alliteration allow amplification appear argument attempt attention becomes century character Clarendon Press closely concept couplet Critical demands depends described direct discursive effect elaboration element elevation emotional emphasis English Essay essential example expression fact figurative formal give heroic idea imagery imaginative imitation important instance interest John Dryden kind lack language least less lines logical London manner matter meaning Memory ment metrical movement nature never original ornament Oxford particularly passage pattern plain plays poem poet poetic poetry of statement Pope portrait Preface Press prose reader reason reference Religio Laici result rhetorical rhythm rhythmic richness satire says seen sense serve seventeenth century significance simply Soul sound speaking stanza stress structure suggestiveness syntax tends theory things thought tone tradition true University verse vitality vols whole words writing