A Critical History of English PoetryOxford University Press, 1946 - 593 Seiten |
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Seite 215
... Nature and imitate the classics : First follow Nature , and your judgment frame By her just standard , which is still the same ; and our guides in thus following Nature are the classics . To them we owe the rules , Those rules of old ...
... Nature and imitate the classics : First follow Nature , and your judgment frame By her just standard , which is still the same ; and our guides in thus following Nature are the classics . To them we owe the rules , Those rules of old ...
Seite 352
... Nature , and rightly ; for , though the Concordance shows that Nature was less often his theme than Man , it is by his poetry of Nature that he is unique , and it was the love of Nature , he tells us , that led him to the love of Man ...
... Nature , and rightly ; for , though the Concordance shows that Nature was less often his theme than Man , it is by his poetry of Nature that he is unique , and it was the love of Nature , he tells us , that led him to the love of Man ...
Seite 507
... Nature , and " crass Casualty , " and " dicing Time , " the witherer of youth and beauty . In the novels to which he turned for thirty years his mood oscillates from ironically gay to grave , the grave steadily predominating , and ...
... Nature , and " crass Casualty , " and " dicing Time , " the witherer of youth and beauty . In the novels to which he turned for thirty years his mood oscillates from ironically gay to grave , the grave steadily predominating , and ...
Inhalt
Chapter | 3 |
Chapter | 10 |
Chapter Three | 23 |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
A. C. Swinburne A. H. Bullen allegory ballad beauty Blake blank verse Burns Byron called Camb century character charm Chaucer Christian Coleridge comedy Cowper Crabbe death delight diction Donne drama dream Dryden E. K. Chambers early Elizabethan England English poetry epic Essay eyes Faerie Queene feeling French Greek heart Heaven human hymns imagination interest John Johnson Keats King Lady language later lines live lover metre Milton mind mood moral Nature never night odes Oxfd Oxford Oxford Poets Paradise Paradise Lost passion pastoral Petrarch plays poems poet poet's poetic political Pope Pope's prose Queen religious rhyme romance satire scene Scots Scott Scottish sense Shakespeare Shelley Shelley's songs sonnets soul Spenser spirit stanza story style Swinburne Tennyson thee theme things Thomas thou thought tion tragedy translation truth vols words Wordsworth write written wrote