The Irish Comic TraditionClarendon Press, 1962 - 258 páginas Tracing the comic tradition in Irish literature from the Ninth century to the present. |
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Página 39
Vivian Mercier. in his hotel . He has absolute power over these characters , except when he is asleep . The characters in Trellis's current novel include some Dublin cowboys left over from a Western novel by the late Mr. Tracy and some ...
Vivian Mercier. in his hotel . He has absolute power over these characters , except when he is asleep . The characters in Trellis's current novel include some Dublin cowboys left over from a Western novel by the late Mr. Tracy and some ...
Página 40
... characters . Dermot escapes , very shaken . Thus ends the novel - within - the- novel . The undergraduate novelist ... characters to be uniformly good or bad or poor or rich . Each should be allowed a private life , self - determina ...
... characters . Dermot escapes , very shaken . Thus ends the novel - within - the- novel . The undergraduate novelist ... characters to be uniformly good or bad or poor or rich . Each should be allowed a private life , self - determina ...
Página 243
... characters are country - bred , the speech of even his most typically Dublin characters reveals a rich substratum of rural usage : from the pages of Ulysses alone one could compile a list of Gaelicisms which would perhaps outnumber ...
... characters are country - bred , the speech of even his most typically Dublin characters reveals a rich substratum of rural usage : from the pages of Ulysses alone one could compile a list of Gaelicisms which would perhaps outnumber ...
Contenido
Macabre and Grotesque Humour in | 3 |
Irish Tradition | 47 |
Irish Wit and Word Play | 78 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Términos y frases comunes
Anglo-Irish Anglo-Irish literature archaic Austin Clarke bardic bruidhean Catholic Celtic century chapter Clan Thomas clergy clerical comic tradition crossans Cuchulain culture Curran Cycle Dánta David O'Bruadair death described Duanaire Dublin Early Irish Literature English epigram example fantasy father Fergus Finn Finnegans Wake folklore follows Frank O'Connor Gaelic literature Gogarty heroes Ibid Ireland Irish satire Irish Texts Irish tradition Irishmen irony James Joyce John Joyce's King Kuno Meyer lampoon language Latin laugh least leprechauns London Mac Conglinne magic Mangaire Merriman's metre Modern Irish Mongán O'Bruadair O'Casey O'Duffy O'Rahilly original Parliament of Clan parody passage Patrick Percy French poem poetry poets priest prose Protestant quatrain quoted reader ridicule Robin Flower saints satire satirists sexual Sheela-na-gig Sheridan song speech stanza story Swift Synge Tadhg tale tion translation Ulster Ulysses verse Vision of Mac W. B. Yeats witty word play writing York