A Critical History of English PoetryChatto & Windus, 1950 - 539 páginas |
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Página 77
... words , dialect words , coinages , and archaisms ; but he was careful always to graft his new shoots on an English stock , and in fact his main enrichment consisted of fine old English words retrieved from Chaucer and Langland . But ...
... words , dialect words , coinages , and archaisms ; but he was careful always to graft his new shoots on an English stock , and in fact his main enrichment consisted of fine old English words retrieved from Chaucer and Langland . But ...
Página 163
... words felt at once to be " poetic " is almost without parallel in English poets , as a glance at the recently published Concordance of his English poems will show . Such words as Professor Wyld cites as making their first appearance ...
... words felt at once to be " poetic " is almost without parallel in English poets , as a glance at the recently published Concordance of his English poems will show . Such words as Professor Wyld cites as making their first appearance ...
Página 388
... word in his famous preface , whether the conventional epithets and personifications of the school of Gray and Collins ... words in a new and striking manner and will form new compounds , an always fresh shoot . in every living language ...
... word in his famous preface , whether the conventional epithets and personifications of the school of Gray and Collins ... words in a new and striking manner and will form new compounds , an always fresh shoot . in every living language ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
A Critical History of English Poetry Sir Herbert John Clifford Grierson,James Cruickshanks Smith Vista de fragmentos - 1956 |
A Critical History of English Poetry Sir Herbert John Clifford Grierson,James Cruickshanks Smith Vista de fragmentos - 1947 |
A Critical History of English Poetry Sir Herbert John Clifford Grierson Sin vista previa disponible - 2013 |
Términos y frases comunes
A. C. Swinburne A. H. Bullen allegory ballad beauty Blake blank verse Burns Byron called century character charm Chaucer Christian Coleridge comedy Cowper Crabbe death delight diction didactic Donne drama dream Dryden E. K. Chambers early Elizabethan England English poetry epic eyes Faerie Queene feeling French Greek heart Heaven human hymns imagination inspired interest John Johnson Keats King Lady language later lines live lover Lycidas metre Milton mind mood moral Nature never night odes Oxfd Paradise Paradise Lost passion pastoral Petrarch plays poems poet poet's poetic political Pope Pope's prose Queen religious rhyme romance satire scene Scots Scott Scottish sense Shakespeare Shelley Shelley's songs sonnets soul Spenser spirit stanza story style Swinburne tells Tennyson thee theme things Thomas thou thought tion tradition tragedy translation truth vols words Wordsworth write written wrote