The Shakespearean Moment and Its Place in the Poetry of the 17th CenturyChatto and Windus, 1954 - 262 ページ |
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... line in the 38th- " if my slight Muse doe please these curious daies " : " curious " means , exactly , " critical ... lines all but one of the platitudes that Shakespeare makes fun of . Watson on the left , Shakespeare's comments on ...
... line in the 38th- " if my slight Muse doe please these curious daies " : " curious " means , exactly , " critical ... lines all but one of the platitudes that Shakespeare makes fun of . Watson on the left , Shakespeare's comments on ...
31 ページ
... line which follows- They are the lords and owners of their faces -again , ironic or not ? Lytton Strachey , quoting these lines in Eminent Victorians ( apropos of Cromer in Egypt ) , decided they were simple condemnation : in them , he ...
... line which follows- They are the lords and owners of their faces -again , ironic or not ? Lytton Strachey , quoting these lines in Eminent Victorians ( apropos of Cromer in Egypt ) , decided they were simple condemnation : in them , he ...
217 ページ
... lines , which we by chance had got , Or some Stage pieces famous long before , Of which your happy memory had store ... line runs straight - with the Horatian influence always present and keeping it recognizably the same- from 217 Р THE ...
... lines , which we by chance had got , Or some Stage pieces famous long before , Of which your happy memory had store ... line runs straight - with the Horatian influence always present and keeping it recognizably the same- from 217 Р THE ...
目次
CHAPTER PAGE 1 Shakespeares Sonnets and the 1590s | 1 |
Donne and the Newfound Methods | 39 |
The Poetry of the Shakespearean Moment Donnes Anniversaries and Shake speares Last Plays | 73 |
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admiration Anglo-catholic 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 example expression fact Falkland feeling Hamlet hath hero heroic heroic drama human Jacobean Jonson Julius Cæsar kind King lady language later lines literary living Lord Herbert manner Marlowe Marvell meaning medieval metaphysical MICHIGAN 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