The Pleasure of Poetry: Reading and Enjoying British Poetry from Donne to Burns
From Donne and Jonson, to Pope, Swift, and Burns, the book offers excerpts of the poetry these artists crafted, and carefully examines the various attributes that have helped to establish them as some of the greatest of all time. Writing in clear, accessible language, Nelson also introduces general poetry terms to the novice, providing examples and explanations where necessary. Readers will no longer feel intimidated by difficult poetry. Instead, they will walk away with the tools they need to read, understand, and appreciate these titans of British letters. |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 34
His children thy great lord may call his own , A fortune in this age but rarely known . ... With other edifices , when they see Those proud , ambitious heaps , and nothing else , May say , their lords have built , but thy lord dwells .
Come forth , my Lord , and see the cart Dressed up with all the country art . wheat ( 1-8 ) Note how Herrick begins by addressing himself to the young workers , bidding them come celebrate the end of their labors and acknowledging their ...
Yet has sae mony taking arts Wi ' Great and Sma ' , Frae God's ain priest the people's hearts He steals awa . from I own ( 67-72 ) Willie calls on the Lord to take note of Hamilton's sins . They are relatively minor ones , though , in ...
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Inhalt
Introduction to Reading Poetry | 1 |
Poet of Secular and Sacred Love | 19 |
Elegist Satirist and Moralist | 37 |
Urheberrecht | |
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The Pleasure of Poetry: Reading and Enjoying British Poetry from Donne to Burns Nicolas H. Nelson Keine Leseprobe verfügbar - 2006 |