Chaucer, the Critical Heritage: 1385-1837Derek Brewer Routledge & K. Paul, 1978 - 342 Seiten |
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Seite 15
... Romantic period , and in the nineteenth century , which will be dis- cussed in the Introduction to the second volume ; but here it may be worth briefly noticing how persistent is the notion of Neoclassical realism , of the emphasis on ...
... Romantic period , and in the nineteenth century , which will be dis- cussed in the Introduction to the second volume ; but here it may be worth briefly noticing how persistent is the notion of Neoclassical realism , of the emphasis on ...
Seite 24
... Romantic historical imagination and feeling for the glamour of medievalism . He is subtle in literary perception , but devotes relatively little space to Chaucer . Perhaps Spenser's veneer of Neoclassicism over his own fundamentally ...
... Romantic historical imagination and feeling for the glamour of medievalism . He is subtle in literary perception , but devotes relatively little space to Chaucer . Perhaps Spenser's veneer of Neoclassicism over his own fundamentally ...
Seite 26
... Romantic note concerns Chaucer's style . There has already been occasion to note how Chaucer's earliest , rhetorical , critics in the fifteenth century praised the elaboration of his diction , ( e.g. Nos 4 , 7 , 17 ) , and how in the ...
... Romantic note concerns Chaucer's style . There has already been occasion to note how Chaucer's earliest , rhetorical , critics in the fifteenth century praised the elaboration of his diction , ( e.g. Nos 4 , 7 , 17 ) , and how in the ...
Inhalt
INTRODUCTION | 1 |
THE PRINCIPAL EDITIONS OF CHAucers works UP TO 1933 | 33 |
CONTENTS | 34 |
Urheberrecht | |
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appear beauty better called Cambridge Canterbury century character Chaucer College considered copies criticism edition educated effect England English equal excellent expression extract fame feeling French genius give Gothic Gower hand hath haue imagination imitate interest Italy John kind known language Latin learned least less lines literary literature lived loue Lydgate manners matter means mind moral nature Neoclassical never noble observe original Oxford perhaps persons Plautus pleasure poem poet poetical poetry praise present printed published reader reason reference remarks respect rhetoric Romantic seems sense Shakespeare sizar speak story style taken tale taste tell thing Thomas thought tion tongue translated Troilus true University verse vnto whole writers written wrote