A. E. Housman: Scholar and PoetUniversity of Minnesota Press, 1958 - 192 pàgines |
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Resultats 1 - 3 de 9.
Pàgina 14
... epithet in A Shropshire Lad , and is itself possibly a reminiscence of the line in The Gardener's Daughter : The cedar spread his dark green layers of shade . Housman is already steeped in the ocean of poetry . The twist at the end of ...
... epithet in A Shropshire Lad , and is itself possibly a reminiscence of the line in The Gardener's Daughter : The cedar spread his dark green layers of shade . Housman is already steeped in the ocean of poetry . The twist at the end of ...
Pàgina 117
... epithet in describing the sights and sounds of nature which recalls the finest passages of L'Allegro and Lycidas . The excellence of Milton's descriptions of nature is that they achieve vividness not through their author's constant ...
... epithet in describing the sights and sounds of nature which recalls the finest passages of L'Allegro and Lycidas . The excellence of Milton's descriptions of nature is that they achieve vividness not through their author's constant ...
Pàgina 143
... epithet is more exact , but he is still harking back to his earliest happiness : On russet floors , by waters idle , The pine lets fall its cone ; The cuckoo shouts all day at nothing In leafy dells alone ; And traveller's joy beguiles ...
... epithet is more exact , but he is still harking back to his earliest happiness : On russet floors , by waters idle , The pine lets fall its cone ; The cuckoo shouts all day at nothing In leafy dells alone ; And traveller's joy beguiles ...
Continguts
JUVENILIA | 13 |
LITERARY INFLUENCES ON HOUSMAN | 42 |
LITERARY INFLUENCES | 64 |
Copyright | |
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A. E. Housman adjective Aeschylus Anth Anthology ASL lxii ASL xliii ASL xxi bitterness border ballads Bredon Hill Catullus classical Clerk Saunders colour critics Cyrenaic dark dead death earth echoes English epigram epithet expressed F. W. Bateson farewell feeling flower friends Grant Richards grave Greek happy heart Heine Heine's Herodotus Housman's poetry imitation influence land language last line Last Poems Latin Leslie Stephen Leslie Stephen Lecture living London Introductory Lecture look lover LP ii LP xxxix Lucretius manner metaphor metre Milton morning mother never night occasionally once onomatopoeia Oxford passage passionate phrase poet probably Propertius quoted reminds reminiscence Sabrinae Corolla scholarship Shropshire Lad sigh Simcox sleep Soldier song sorrow soul sound speaks stanza Tennyson thee theme things thou thought Wenlock Edge wheels of darkness wind words wrote xlviii xxxi young