Tradition and Experiment in English PoetryMacmillan, 1979 - 343 sivua |
Kirjan sisältä
Tulokset 1 - 3 kokonaismäärästä 42
Sivu 50
... tale . We may be forgiven if we feel we have already heard it . And it is a fine statement of feminine individuality in an age when a married woman was a piece of property . Nothing is more entrancing in the whole of Chaucer than the ...
... tale . We may be forgiven if we feel we have already heard it . And it is a fine statement of feminine individuality in an age when a married woman was a piece of property . Nothing is more entrancing in the whole of Chaucer than the ...
Sivu 53
... tale , therefore , is at once black farce and tragi - comedy . It takes place in January's walled garden . May persuades him that she is pregnant and desires a pear . January helps her up the pear - tree and into the arms of the squire ...
... tale , therefore , is at once black farce and tragi - comedy . It takes place in January's walled garden . May persuades him that she is pregnant and desires a pear . January helps her up the pear - tree and into the arms of the squire ...
Sivu 63
... tale is that the tale relates their last exploit together . The cause of the impetuosity of their descent upon the Canterbury pilgrims is that they are in full flight from the consequences of their crime . Among the extraordinary ...
... tale is that the tale relates their last exploit together . The cause of the impetuosity of their descent upon the Canterbury pilgrims is that they are in full flight from the consequences of their crime . Among the extraordinary ...
Sisältö
Piers Plowman through Modern Eyes I | 1 |
Experimentalist Extraordinary | 30 |
Elizabethan Poetry | 69 |
Tekijänoikeudet | |
10 muita osia ei näytetty
Muita painoksia - Näytä kaikki
Yleiset termit ja lausekkeet
American appears Auden Ben Jonson Blake Browning Burnt Norton called Canterbury Tales century certainly character characteristic Chaucer Cleopatra Coleridge comedy context cottage critics death dramatic monologue Dryden Eliot Elizabethan English poetry epistle example F. R. Leavis fact fiction figure Georgians husband imagery images imitation Jonson Keats King King Lear Lady Langland language Lear Leavis literature live look lyric Macbeth matter medieval Milton mode modern narrative never night original Othello passage Patrick Kavanagh person Peter Redgrove Piers Plowman pilgrim play plot Plutarch poem poet poetic Pound Prelude Prologue prose reader rhythm Romantic satire scene seems seen sense sermon Shakespeare Shelley sleep song speech Spenser story suggest tale technique tell thee theme thing Thomas thou tone tradition translation turn verse Visio voice W. H. Auden Whitman wife words Wordsworth writing young