Politeness and Poetry in the Age of PopeFairleigh Dickinson University Press, 1989 - 166 Seiten Interest in politeness in the eighteenth century is shown to reflect anxiety about social change and indicate a search for guidelines in a newly commercialized society. Evident is the dilemma of poets such as Parnell, Prior, Swift, Gay, and Pope. |
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Seite 42
... kind of polite , occasional verse is to write a kind of vers de société and in so doing to provide models of social behavior . Pope felt all the personal attractions of Walsh and “ Granville the polite , " 47 but their influence on him ...
... kind of polite , occasional verse is to write a kind of vers de société and in so doing to provide models of social behavior . Pope felt all the personal attractions of Walsh and “ Granville the polite , " 47 but their influence on him ...
Seite 60
... kind of evasion . Polite Sentiment and Ideology Such self - consciously stylish poems , evasive or not , are far from being without their own ideological purposes . Parnell pre- sents images of politeness and exemplary models of social ...
... kind of evasion . Polite Sentiment and Ideology Such self - consciously stylish poems , evasive or not , are far from being without their own ideological purposes . Parnell pre- sents images of politeness and exemplary models of social ...
Seite 102
... Kind of Behaviour , which we contract by having too much conversed with Persons of high Station and Eminency ; these Qualifications being reckoned by the Vulgar of all Ranks to be Marks of Levity.2 Yet Swift is also notorious as the ...
... Kind of Behaviour , which we contract by having too much conversed with Persons of high Station and Eminency ; these Qualifications being reckoned by the Vulgar of all Ranks to be Marks of Levity.2 Yet Swift is also notorious as the ...
Inhalt
Preface | 7 |
Politics the Poet | 30 |
Politeness | 43 |
Urheberrecht | |
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amateur aristocratic attempt attitudes authority become birth Books called central Century Christian cited civility classical combines concern convention corrupt course court Criticism cultural despite developments early Eighteenth eighteenth-century elements elite England English Epistle Essay ethos example express fact false fashionable feeling Gay's gentry genuine gives idea ideal ideological important influence interest involved John kind laureate leisure less Letter literary Literature living London manners mean misogyny mode moral nature never obviously occasional Origins Oxford Parnell Parnell's pastoral patronage period poem poet Poetics poetry polite Pope Pope's position praise present Prior Prose reflects regard religious remains Restoration revealing Richard Blackmore role satire says seems sense sentiment seriousness shows social society status Studies sublime Swift thing thought tion tone town traditional true turn University Press values verse virtue whole women write