Chaucer, the Critical Heritage: 1385-1837Derek Brewer Routledge & K. Paul, 1978 - 342 Seiten |
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... literature . The change may be described as the change from Gothic to Neoclassical concepts of literature . We are immediately in a difficulty here , because we owe most , if not all , of our ideas about what literature is , or should ...
... literature . The change may be described as the change from Gothic to Neoclassical concepts of literature . We are immediately in a difficulty here , because we owe most , if not all , of our ideas about what literature is , or should ...
Seite 4
... literature , were different . It is con- venient to sum up the pre - Neoclassical attitudes as ' rhe- torical ' , typical of all sorts of traditional literature , including so - called ' oral literature ' . The English seg- ment of ...
... literature , were different . It is con- venient to sum up the pre - Neoclassical attitudes as ' rhe- torical ' , typical of all sorts of traditional literature , including so - called ' oral literature ' . The English seg- ment of ...
Seite 9
... literature for being fiction , and fic- tion for being in itself reprehensible ; and contrasted Chaucer's works ... literature and of the superior status of the poet that help to disclose , as well as to develop , a new feeling ...
... literature for being fiction , and fic- tion for being in itself reprehensible ; and contrasted Chaucer's works ... literature and of the superior status of the poet that help to disclose , as well as to develop , a new feeling ...
Inhalt
CONTENTS | 34 |
Comments | 35 |
THOMAS USK Love praises the philosophical poet c 1387 | 42 |
Urheberrecht | |
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appear beauty boke called Cambridge Canterbury century character Chaucer College considered copies criticism edition educated effect English equal excellent expression extract fame feeling French genius give Gothic Gower hand hath haue imagination imitation interest Italy John kind known language Latin learned least less letters lines literary literature lived loue Lydgate manners matter means mind moral nature Neoclassical never noble observed original Oxford perhaps persons Plautus poem poet poetical poetry praise present printed published reader reason reference remarks respect Romantic rude seems sense speak spirit story style taken tale taste tell ther thing Thomas thought tion tongue translation Troilus true University verse vnto whole worthy writer written wrote