Chaucer to "B. V.": With an Additional Paper on Herman Melville : a Selection of Lectures Given Chiefly at Tokyo University |
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Página 43
What Marlowe read about him was not what subsequent historians have made clear , but the poet's imagination was aroused by the principal truth — that Tamburlaine had raised himself to extraordinary power , wealth and splendour .
What Marlowe read about him was not what subsequent historians have made clear , but the poet's imagination was aroused by the principal truth — that Tamburlaine had raised himself to extraordinary power , wealth and splendour .
Página 95
But what marks him out as a poet of high order in the usual acceptance is his direct power when he “ no art at all . ” Herrick's simplicity is overwhelming . He fears no abuse , for he thinks , though he is growing old , as a child .
But what marks him out as a poet of high order in the usual acceptance is his direct power when he “ no art at all . ” Herrick's simplicity is overwhelming . He fears no abuse , for he thinks , though he is growing old , as a child .
Página 181
One of his father's younger friends , John Taylor , was publishing a first - class monthly magazine , The London , to which Charles Lamb , William Hazlitt , Thomas De Quincey and other masterly essayists and poets contributed .
One of his father's younger friends , John Taylor , was publishing a first - class monthly magazine , The London , to which Charles Lamb , William Hazlitt , Thomas De Quincey and other masterly essayists and poets contributed .
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Contenido
PREFACE | 1 |
AND ESPECIALLY THE FAERIE | 17 |
CHRISTOPHER MARLOWE | 38 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Chaucer to "B. V.": With an Additional Paper on Herman Melville; a Selection ... Edmund Blunden Vista de fragmentos - 1950 |
Chaucer to "B. V.": With an Additional Paper on Herman Melville; a Selection ... Edmund Blunden Vista de fragmentos - 1950 |
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