Readings in English Literature: From Chaucer to Matthew ArnoldGerald Bullett A. & C. Black, 1945 - 250 Seiten |
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Seite 61
From Chaucer to Matthew Arnold Gerald Bullett. and the larger and profounder poetic impulse which is its true life - source . But Paradise Lost is for older readers . The finest poem of Milton's young maturity is Lycidas . It is a poem ...
From Chaucer to Matthew Arnold Gerald Bullett. and the larger and profounder poetic impulse which is its true life - source . But Paradise Lost is for older readers . The finest poem of Milton's young maturity is Lycidas . It is a poem ...
Seite 76
... poets known to literary historians as the Metaphysicals , ANDREW MARVELL ( 1621-1678 ) is not the best or most typical ... poem which he first wrote in Latin , have a subtle and luminous quality nowhere excelled , and seldom matched , in ...
... poets known to literary historians as the Metaphysicals , ANDREW MARVELL ( 1621-1678 ) is not the best or most typical ... poem which he first wrote in Latin , have a subtle and luminous quality nowhere excelled , and seldom matched , in ...
Seite 124
... poems ; and sometimes he transmutes what she gives him , sometimes not . She records , for example , how he wrote his ... poem this becomes : Oh , pleasant , pleasant were the days , The time when in our childish plays My Sister Emmeline ...
... poems ; and sometimes he transmutes what she gives him , sometimes not . She records , for example , how he wrote his ... poem this becomes : Oh , pleasant , pleasant were the days , The time when in our childish plays My Sister Emmeline ...
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Adams Afrasiab Arethuse BANQUO beauty birds breast breath bright Chaucer cloud cold cried dark dead dear death deep delight doth dream earth end my song euphuism Excalibur eyes fair fame father fear flowers GERALD BULLETT give green Gudurz hand happy hath hear heard heart Heaven Jane Austen Johnson King Arthur LADY MACBETH light live look lord lute Lycidas mind moon never night noble o'er OBERON Oxus Persian pleasure poem poet poetry Porphyro pray prose rose round Rustum sand seem'd Seistan Shakespeare sight sing Sir Bedivere Sir Lucan Sir Walter Ralegh sleep smile Sohrab soul spear spirit St Agnes stars stood stream Sweet Thames sword Tartar tears tell thee thine things thou art thou hast thought TITANIA Trulliber unto verse voice wife wind wings words young youth