Dialogues with Convention: Readings in Renaissance PoetryUniversity of Michigan Press, 1989 - 204 páginas Examines the poetic genres and poetic conventions of English Renaissance poetry. |
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Página 78
... lines point to what lies ahead and acknowledge his sober recognition that should he die there is little he could complain of a recognition that both affirms the nature of his love for her and the danger of what is to be undertaken . The ...
... lines point to what lies ahead and acknowledge his sober recognition that should he die there is little he could complain of a recognition that both affirms the nature of his love for her and the danger of what is to be undertaken . The ...
Página 96
... lines . Whereas the conceit , or metaphor , of the second quatrain ( the usurped town ) and of the sestet ( the divorce and ravishment ) are obvious enough , the opening lines seem to show Donne writing ' as though no single metaphor ...
... lines . Whereas the conceit , or metaphor , of the second quatrain ( the usurped town ) and of the sestet ( the divorce and ravishment ) are obvious enough , the opening lines seem to show Donne writing ' as though no single metaphor ...
Página 106
... line from II Pen- seroso , ' Where more is meant then meets the ear ' , Coleridge asserts that , of all poets , Milton ' wrote nothing without an interior meaning ' ( 866 ) . And he proceeds to elucidate the interior mean- ing of these ...
... line from II Pen- seroso , ' Where more is meant then meets the ear ' , Coleridge asserts that , of all poets , Milton ' wrote nothing without an interior meaning ' ( 866 ) . And he proceeds to elucidate the interior mean- ing of these ...
Contenido
Sidney and the idea of the sonnet | 23 |
CONVENTIONS OF IMITATION | 59 |
CONVENTIONS OF DEVOTION I | 81 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Dialogues with Convention: Readings in Renaissance Poetry Ronald David Bedford Vista de fragmentos - 1989 |
Dialogues with Convention: Readings in Renaissance Poetry Ronald David Bedford Vista de fragmentos - 1989 |
Términos y frases comunes
action activity actually Adam appears argue argument artist asserts Astrophil Book Christian clear conventions course critical cross Defence dependent Donne Donne's earth effect elegy English epic equally example experience fact Fall feel fiction field figures final follows force genres give God's going hand heart Heaven human imaginative imitation implied instance issue John kind knowledge landscape lines literary living logical London look meaning merely Milton mind moral nature never offers once opening Ovid Oxford Paradise Lost paradox pastoral perhaps play poem poet poetic poetry possible present question reader relation Renaissance response rhetorical Satan seems sense shows Sidney Sidney's simile sonnet sort spelling stand Stella story Studies suggest thee things thou thought tion true turn University Press verses whole writing