Fleeting Things: English Poets and Poems, 1616-1660Harvard University Press, 1990 - 394 páginas Offers new interpretations of poems by Milton, Jonson, Herrick, and Lovelace, and looks at five themes in seventeenth century English poetry. |
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Página 22
... contrast to war - torn Europe . Perhaps the only one of Carew's public poems which is widely known today is his elegy on the death of John Donne , from which many of the critical opinions of Metaphysical poetry have been derived . This ...
... contrast to war - torn Europe . Perhaps the only one of Carew's public poems which is widely known today is his elegy on the death of John Donne , from which many of the critical opinions of Metaphysical poetry have been derived . This ...
Página 72
... contrasts his and Charles Cotton's peace with the fate of kings who " want them- selves . " In earlier , happier times the icon of the king on the move could be used to contrast with the peace of the family to which he returned . Henry ...
... contrasts his and Charles Cotton's peace with the fate of kings who " want them- selves . " In earlier , happier times the icon of the king on the move could be used to contrast with the peace of the family to which he returned . Henry ...
Página 205
... contrast home . Catching a cold was a common enough euphemism for dying - as Webster's characters reveal- and tumbling " to your rest " and not being able to " do " focus on the bed as the place where life and death are most obviously ...
... contrast home . Catching a cold was a common enough euphemism for dying - as Webster's characters reveal- and tumbling " to your rest " and not being able to " do " focus on the bed as the place where life and death are most obviously ...
Contenido
Thresholds I | 1 |
Praising and Blaming | 15 |
Strafford and Buckingham | 41 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Términos y frases comunes
action appear ballad become begins Bermudas body called century Charles Charles's church close comes common contrast court dead death describes doth English epigram example experience expression eyes face fair fall fear final follow give given hair hand hath head heart Herbert Herrick hope idea ideal John Jonson keep kind king king's lady least leave light lines live look lost means Milton mind move nature never offer once opening peace perhaps piece play poem poet poetry political possible praise present proverb Puritan reader rest restoration rose seas seems sense Shakespeare ship soul stand stanza sweet thee things thou thought tion true turns unto verse whole wind write written