The Poets and Their Critics: Chaucer to Collins, by H. S. DaviesHutchinson Educational, 1960 - 240 sivua |
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Sivu 46
... delight ; and I think it gave me as much when I read it over about a year or two ago . Spence's Anecdotes 1744 SPENCE Had Spenser formed his allegories on the plan of the ancient poets and artists , as much as he did from Ariosto and ...
... delight ; and I think it gave me as much when I read it over about a year or two ago . Spence's Anecdotes 1744 SPENCE Had Spenser formed his allegories on the plan of the ancient poets and artists , as much as he did from Ariosto and ...
Sivu 113
... delight was to sport in the wide regions of possibility ; reality was a scene too narrow for his mind . He sent his faculties out upon discovery , into worlds where only imagination can travel , and delighted to form new modes of ...
... delight was to sport in the wide regions of possibility ; reality was a scene too narrow for his mind . He sent his faculties out upon discovery , into worlds where only imagination can travel , and delighted to form new modes of ...
Sivu 161
... delight was in wild and daring sallies of sentiment , in the irregular and excentrick violence of wit . He delighted to tread upon the brink of meaning , where light and darkness begin to mingle ; to approach the precipice of absurdity ...
... delight was in wild and daring sallies of sentiment , in the irregular and excentrick violence of wit . He delighted to tread upon the brink of meaning , where light and darkness begin to mingle ; to approach the precipice of absurdity ...
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admiration allegory appear artificial beauty Ben Jonson better blank verse Canterbury Tales century character Chaucer classic Unity classical Collins Comus couplet Cowley criticism delight diction Donne Donne's Dryden Dunciad effect Elegy English poetry English Poets epic Essay excellence expression Faerie Queene fancy faults feeling genius give Gray Gray's harmony hath Homer human ideas imagery images imagination imitated intellectual John Donne John Milton Johnson judgment kind language learning lines Lycidas lyric manner masters meaning metaphysical metaphysical poets Milton mind moral nature never numbers observation Paradise Lost passage passion peculiar perfect perhaps pleasure poem poetical poetry Pope Pope's praise prose qualities reader rhyme satire seems sense sentiment Shakespeare sound Spenser spirit stanza style sublime T. S. Eliot taste things thought tion translation truth versification Virgil virtue whole words Wordsworth writing wrote