Fifteen Poets: Chaucer, Spenser, Shakespeare [and Others] ...Clarendon Press, 1941 - 503 páginas Selections of the best work of the masters of English poetry from Chaucer to Arnold. Each group of selections is preceded by short essays of appreciation and summaries of the poets' lives. |
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Resultados 1-3 de 36
Página 73
... verse form that appear from period to period of his development . His early verse is in an unbroken form , with the line falling into two parts , divided by the caesura near the middle , and claused by the pause at the end : The current ...
... verse form that appear from period to period of his development . His early verse is in an unbroken form , with the line falling into two parts , divided by the caesura near the middle , and claused by the pause at the end : The current ...
Página 105
... verse - paragraphs of Paradise Lost . Why , it may be asked , if Milton had such vitality , did he write , comparatively , so little verse ? If , as is probable , Milton's vitality resembles that of another seventeenth- century ...
... verse - paragraphs of Paradise Lost . Why , it may be asked , if Milton had such vitality , did he write , comparatively , so little verse ? If , as is probable , Milton's vitality resembles that of another seventeenth- century ...
Página 107
... verse appears early and remains to the end . There is an accent of grave sweetness that appears faintly in the paraphrases of the Psalms he wrote at the age of fifteen and which is not extinguished in Samson Agonistes . But there is a ...
... verse appears early and remains to the end . There is an accent of grave sweetness that appears faintly in the paraphrases of the Psalms he wrote at the age of fifteen and which is not extinguished in Samson Agonistes . But there is a ...
Contenido
GEOFFREY CHAUCER By H S BENNETT | 8 |
The Dream | 33 |
The Fight of the Red Cross Knight and the Heathen | 54 |
Otras 24 secciones no mostradas
Términos y frases comunes
Æneid ancient Mariner beauty behold beneath blow breast breath bright calm Camelot Christabel cloud Coleridge dæmons dark dead dear death deep doth dramatic lyric dream Dryden earth eternal Excalibur eyes Faerie Queene fair fame fear feel flowers GEORGE GORDON BYRON hand happy hast hath hear heard heart heaven hill Keats King King Arthur Kubla Khan Lady of Shalott light live look lord Lycidas lyric Matthew Arnold mighty Milton mind moon morn Muse Nature never night o'er once pain pale Paradise Lost poems poet poetic poetry Pope rose round Samian wine Scholar Gipsy Shelley shine shore silent sing Sir Bedivere sleep soft song soul sound spirit stars sweet tears Tennyson thee thine things thou art thought thro verse voice wandering waves weary wild wind woods Wordsworth youth