The Poets and Their Critics: Chaucer to Collins, by H. S. DaviesHutchinson Educational, 1960 - 240 pàgines |
Des de l'interior del llibre
Resultats 1 - 3 de 69.
Pàgina 26
... mind the more from the ' close - pent up ' scenes of ordinary life , and to make him ' rive their concealing continents ' , to give himself up to the unrestrained indulgence of ' flowery tenderness ' . . . . It is not possible for any ...
... mind the more from the ' close - pent up ' scenes of ordinary life , and to make him ' rive their concealing continents ' , to give himself up to the unrestrained indulgence of ' flowery tenderness ' . . . . It is not possible for any ...
Pàgina 66
... mind is more naturally conveyed through the particular detail . The general state of mind which the author is interested in and which he wishes to convey is broken down and parcelled out into a number of easily assimilable details , to ...
... mind is more naturally conveyed through the particular detail . The general state of mind which the author is interested in and which he wishes to convey is broken down and parcelled out into a number of easily assimilable details , to ...
Pàgina 233
... minds of his readers , certain traces of thought and feelings which never wear out , because nature had left them in his own mind . He is the only one of the minor poets of whom , if he had lived , it cannot be said that he might not ...
... minds of his readers , certain traces of thought and feelings which never wear out , because nature had left them in his own mind . He is the only one of the minor poets of whom , if he had lived , it cannot be said that he might not ...
Altres edicions - Mostra-ho tot
The Poets and Their Critics: Chaucer to Collins, by H. S. Davies Hugh Sykes Davies Visualització de fragments - 1960 |
Frases i termes més freqüents
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