The Uses of Nostalgia: Studies in Pastoral PoetrySchocken Books, 1972 - 248 ページ |
この書籍内から
検索結果1-3 / 71
199 ページ
... comes , we can notice , not once but twice in this short passage : in the lines against the hypocrites ( 744-749 ) ... comes from God and abstinence comes from the devil . The third style of the passage is the tender lyricism 199 THE LOSS ...
... comes , we can notice , not once but twice in this short passage : in the lines against the hypocrites ( 744-749 ) ... comes from God and abstinence comes from the devil . The third style of the passage is the tender lyricism 199 THE LOSS ...
218 ページ
... come in clumsily , and Chaucer comes clumsily into them . The rhymes are awkward , even for early Keats . They do not even say what he means , since they are a lament that his account of the pagan progression is too unreal : so the dew ...
... come in clumsily , and Chaucer comes clumsily into them . The rhymes are awkward , even for early Keats . They do not even say what he means , since they are a lament that his account of the pagan progression is too unreal : so the dew ...
236 ページ
... comes to modern life , Arnold is as explicit here as he was in The Scholar Gipsy . When it comes to declaring his loss , showing us a life without Clough , without youth , without Oxfordshire , he speaks directly and in his own person ...
... comes to modern life , Arnold is as explicit here as he was in The Scholar Gipsy . When it comes to declaring his loss , showing us a life without Clough , without youth , without Oxfordshire , he speaks directly and in his own person ...
他の版 - すべて表示
多く使われている語句
accept Arcadia Arnold assertion beauty belong C. S. Lewis chastity childhood Christian Comus contrast convention corrupt countryside course court Damoetas dance death delight describes dream earth Eclogue emotion explicit fact Faerie Queene feel flocks flowers garden Golden Age golden slumbers Hanna Segal happy haunting Heaven idyllic innocence Keats king kiss lines literary live look loss lovers Lycidas magic Marvell Marvell's means Melanie Klein Milk Wood Milton Miss Lonelyhearts moral nature never nostalgia nymphs Opico pagan Paradise paradox passage pastoral poetry Pastorella pathetic fallacy perhaps play poem poem's poet poetic political praise Puritan rejection Renaissance Ronsard rural satire Scholar Gipsy seems sense sexual shepherds simple sing social song sophisticated Spenser stanza story sweet tells thee theme Theocritus theory thing thou Thyrsis Tityrus tradition tree true turn Virgil woods write