A Critical History of English PoetryChatto & Windus, 1950 - 539 Seiten |
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Seite 161
... live , and I will live Thy Protestant to be : Or bid me love , and I will give A loving heart to thee . Thou art my life , my love , my heart , The very eyes of me : And hast command of every part , To live and die for thee . Herrick ...
... live , and I will live Thy Protestant to be : Or bid me love , and I will give A loving heart to thee . Thou art my life , my love , my heart , The very eyes of me : And hast command of every part , To live and die for thee . Herrick ...
Seite 239
... live in the country who are fit to live there . " But one note he did strike with convic- tion and dignity - the woes of poverty : This mournful truth is everywhere confess'd , Slow rises worth by poverty depress'd . Eleven years later ...
... live in the country who are fit to live there . " But one note he did strike with convic- tion and dignity - the woes of poverty : This mournful truth is everywhere confess'd , Slow rises worth by poverty depress'd . Eleven years later ...
Seite 358
... live with God , themselves Are God , existing in the mighty whole , As indistinguishable as the cloudless east At noon is from the cloudless west , when all The hemisphere is one cerulean blue . Whether we call this pantheism or ...
... live with God , themselves Are God , existing in the mighty whole , As indistinguishable as the cloudless east At noon is from the cloudless west , when all The hemisphere is one cerulean blue . Whether we call this pantheism or ...
Inhalt
Chapter | 3 |
Chapter | 10 |
Chapter Three | 23 |
Urheberrecht | |
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A Critical History of English Poetry Sir Herbert John Clifford Grierson Keine Leseprobe verfügbar - 2013 |
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
A. C. Swinburne A. H. Bullen allegory ballad beauty Blake blank verse Burns Byron called century character charm Chaucer Christian Coleridge comedy Cowper Crabbe death delight diction didactic Donne drama dream Dryden E. K. Chambers early Elizabethan England English poetry epic eyes Faerie Queene feeling French Greek heart Heaven human hymns imagination inspired interest John Johnson Keats King Lady language later lines live lover Lycidas metre Milton mind mood moral Nature never night odes Oxfd 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 tells Tennyson thee theme things Thomas thou thought tion tradition tragedy translation truth vols words Wordsworth write written wrote