Older Masters: Essays and Reflections on English and American LiteratureCarcanet, 1992 - 328 עמודים Donald Davie's major essays on British and American writers from Chaucer to Browning. |
מתוך הספר
תוצאות 1-3 מתוך 47
עמוד 78
... verse , or adjoin- ing a whole second to the former , looks more like the design of two , than the answer of one . Suppose we acknowledge it : how comes this confederacy to be more displeasing to you , than in a dance which is well ...
... verse , or adjoin- ing a whole second to the former , looks more like the design of two , than the answer of one . Suppose we acknowledge it : how comes this confederacy to be more displeasing to you , than in a dance which is well ...
עמוד 144
... verse in couplets , although it may be marvellously euphonious ( as it often is in Pope ) , is essentially un- musical . The distrust of the dynamic , the hankering after and faith in the rigid , precludes any possibility of weaving ...
... verse in couplets , although it may be marvellously euphonious ( as it often is in Pope ) , is essentially un- musical . The distrust of the dynamic , the hankering after and faith in the rigid , precludes any possibility of weaving ...
עמוד 316
... verse ' , it is verse that disregards Wyatt and Campion and Pope before it as certainly as , after it , it disregards Pound and the young Eliot . Such blank verse - the unrhymed , relentlessly regular pentameter - can be squeezed out ...
... verse ' , it is verse that disregards Wyatt and Campion and Pope before it as certainly as , after it , it disregards Pound and the young Eliot . Such blank verse - the unrhymed , relentlessly regular pentameter - can be squeezed out ...
תוכן
Chaucer and One Idea of Englishness 1972 | 7 |
A Reading of The Oceans Love to Cynthia 1960 | 13 |
Shakespeare and the Practising Poet Today 1976 | 31 |
זכויות יוצרים | |
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מהדורות אחרות - הצג הכל
מונחים וביטויים נפוצים
Adams admired appears argument believe Berkeley better body called century certainly comes contrary course criticism death dialogue diction distinction Dryden effect eighteenth eighteenth-century England English essay example experience expression fact feel figure follows force give hand human idea imagination important instance interest John Johnson kind language later laws learned least Ledyard less lines literary literature lived London look matter means metaphor mind nature never object once passage perhaps period person philosopher poem poet poetic poetry political Pope possible present principle prose question reader reason rhetoric seems seen sense Shakespeare Smart society sort speak spirit stand stanza style surely taken Taylor things thought tion tradition true turn verse whole Wordsworth writing wrote