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 25
66 It does not matter whether the narrative is logical in bringing us , for example , in Book I , Canto I , to the house of Sleep . Spenser presumably had a clear idea , at the outset , of his Red Cross Knight and the duty which ...
66 It does not matter whether the narrative is logical in bringing us , for example , in Book I , Canto I , to the house of Sleep . Spenser presumably had a clear idea , at the outset , of his Red Cross Knight and the duty which ...
Página 94
He is always glad to bring into his poems the perfumes known to the ladies of his age ; he was taken with the apparel which they wore , and so nobody has surpassed his little poem beginning " Whenas in silks my Julia goes .
He is always glad to bring into his poems the perfumes known to the ladies of his age ; he was taken with the apparel which they wore , and so nobody has surpassed his little poem beginning " Whenas in silks my Julia goes .
Página 198
There is a richness or luxury of speech , selected for its sensuous power , which Browning loves , but it was Keats's special habit . here bring in a less familiar name as having a con- spicuous place in the history of Browning's poetic ...
There is a richness or luxury of speech , selected for its sensuous power , which Browning loves , but it was Keats's special habit . here bring in a less familiar name as having a con- spicuous place in the history of Browning's poetic ...
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Contenido
PAGE | 2 |
GEOFFRY CHAUCER | 17 |
CHRISTOPHER MARLOWE | 38 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 11 secciones no mostradas
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Chaucer to "B. V.": With an Additional Paper on Herman Melville : a ... Edmund Blunden Vista de fragmentos - 1967 |
Chaucer to "B. V.": With an Additional Paper on Herman Melville; a Selection ... Edmund Blunden Vista de fragmentos - 1950 |
Términos y frases comunes
ancient appeared Arnold beauty became become bring Browning called century character Chatterton Chaucer comes course critical dead death delight died Donne dream early edition England English eyes fall fancy Faustus feel followed give given hand head hear Herrick Hood hope human idea imaginative Italy Johnson kind King known leave letter light lines literary literature living London look Marlowe master Melville mind nature never night once pass passages perhaps Pilgrims play poem poet poetical poetry present prose published Queen readers scene seems seen Shakespeare sometimes soon soul speak Spenser story style Swift tell thee things Thomas Thomson thou thought tion University verse whole writing written wrote young