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 16
... means that England has been transported across the seas . The con- ceit is that since Buckingham and Charles embody virtually everything of value in the country , their departure means that the country itself has gone with them : Sir ...
... means that England has been transported across the seas . The con- ceit is that since Buckingham and Charles embody virtually everything of value in the country , their departure means that the country itself has gone with them : Sir ...
Página 129
... means deeds over words , inactivity means the pen rather than the heart . A paragraph in Discoveries explores these last two oppositions further : Good men are the stars , the planets of the ages wherein they live , and illustrate the ...
... means deeds over words , inactivity means the pen rather than the heart . A paragraph in Discoveries explores these last two oppositions further : Good men are the stars , the planets of the ages wherein they live , and illustrate the ...
Página 262
... means " Have sexual experience while you can , " or it means “ Be- come more and more beautiful . ” This ambiguity is carried over from the title , where “ make much of " means either that the virgins should treasure each moment or that ...
... means " Have sexual experience while you can , " or it means “ Be- come more and more beautiful . ” This ambiguity is carried over from the title , where “ make much of " means either that the virgins should treasure each moment or that ...
Contenido
Thresholds I | 1 |
Praising and Blaming | 15 |
Strafford and Buckingham | 41 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Términos y frases comunes
Andrew Marvell Appleton House ballad Ben Jonson blush breath Buckingham Carew celebration century ceremony Charles Charles's church close common contrast Corbett court Davenant dead death Donne's dost doth Duke Earl of Strafford Edmund Waller Edward King English epigram eyes fair fate fear Felton's give hair hath heart heaven Henry Vaughan Herbert Herrick Herrick's poem Hesperides Ibid ideal Inigo Jones John John Milton Jonson Julia king king's lady lines live look Lovelace Lovelace's Lycidas lyric Marvell's masques Milton muse never offer Paradise Lost peace piece play poem's poet poet's Poetaster poetry praise princes proverb Puritan queen reader restoration rhyme Richard Lovelace rose royal Sciography seas sense seventeenth seventeenth-century sexual Shakespeare ship snake song sonnet soul stanza Strafford sweet thee things thou tion turns unto verse virgin vision Waller's wind word write wrote