The Shakespearean Moment: And Its Place in the Poetry of the 17Th CenturyColumbia University Press, 1954 - 264 ページ Looks at the works of Shakespeare from his sonnets and the 1500's, to the society of the Shakespearian moment, the Restoration, and criticism and poetry after the Restoration. |
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... beauty is doubtful - it is only on the young man that " beauty " and " beautiful " are lavished with Spenserian confidence . Her beauty , if beauty it be , is distinctively , and disturbingly , modern : In the ould age blacke was not ...
... beauty is doubtful - it is only on the young man that " beauty " and " beautiful " are lavished with Spenserian confidence . Her beauty , if beauty it be , is distinctively , and disturbingly , modern : In the ould age blacke was not ...
69 ページ
... beauty of these lines has a static quality , more lyrical than dramatic . The Hellenic world is used as a kind of shorthand , to provide readymade terms of reference whereby an image of ideal beauty may be created : the beauty of Helen ...
... beauty of these lines has a static quality , more lyrical than dramatic . The Hellenic world is used as a kind of shorthand , to provide readymade terms of reference whereby an image of ideal beauty may be created : the beauty of Helen ...
91 ページ
... beauty ( women's beauty , as the context makes clear ) may be loving the best that this life has to give— “ and beauty worthy'st is to love " -- but neither it , nor its object , is stable : - Poor cousened cousenor , that she , and ...
... beauty ( women's beauty , as the context makes clear ) may be loving the best that this life has to give— “ and beauty worthy'st is to love " -- but neither it , nor its object , is stable : - Poor cousened cousenor , that she , and ...
目次
CHAPTER PAGE | 1 |
Donnes Anniversaries and Shake | 73 |
The Society of the Shakespearean | 107 |
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多く使われている語句
admiration Anglo-catholic Astraea Redux Augustan beauty Ben Jonson Bishop Sprat Church Civil Clarendon classical classicist commonsense contemporary course courtly Coy Mistress critical Cromwell Cymbeline death diction difference divine Donne's doth dramatist Dryden eighteenth century Elegie Elizabethan emotion English poetry Euphuism expression fact Falkland feeling Hamlet hath hero heroic heroic drama human Jacobean Jacobean drama Jonson kind King Lady language later lines literary living look Lord Herbert manner Marlowe Marvell meaning medieval metaphysical Milton mind modern moral nature never noble passage patron perhaps plays poems poet political prose Puritan rejection Religio Laici religion religious Renaissance Renaissance classicism Restoration Roman Satire Second Anniversarie seems seen sense sensuous seventeenth century Shakespearean Smectymnuus society Sonnets soul Spenser spirit style Sunne Tamburlaine taste theatre thee theological things thou thought tion tone tradition tragedy tragic true verse Winter's Tale words writing