Jacobean and Caroline Poetry: An AnthologyThomas Grant Steven Cain Methuen, 1981 - Počet stran: 334 |
Vyhledávání v knize
Výsledky 1-3 z 46
Strana 2
... Donne ' at all literally , as Eliot himself seems to have been aware . No poet of any real substance is committed to Donne in the way that Vaughan is to Herbert , Herrick to Jonson , or Drayton to Spenser . His most distinguished ...
... Donne ' at all literally , as Eliot himself seems to have been aware . No poet of any real substance is committed to Donne in the way that Vaughan is to Herbert , Herrick to Jonson , or Drayton to Spenser . His most distinguished ...
Strana 6
... Donne's poems as wholes create new , complex and paradoxical harmonies through that same witty but convincing logic . The poems are in part microcosmic reflections of Donne's disordered world , in part answers to the problems it posed .
... Donne's poems as wholes create new , complex and paradoxical harmonies through that same witty but convincing logic . The poems are in part microcosmic reflections of Donne's disordered world , in part answers to the problems it posed .
Strana 21
An Anthology Thomas Grant Steven Cain. JOHN DONNE ( 1572–1631 ) Donne grew up in a strongly Roman Catholic family , and ended his life as one of the most celebrated preachers of the Anglican church . He was thus no stranger to ...
An Anthology Thomas Grant Steven Cain. JOHN DONNE ( 1572–1631 ) Donne grew up in a strongly Roman Catholic family , and ended his life as one of the most celebrated preachers of the Anglican church . He was thus no stranger to ...
Obsah
Oh my black soul | 2 |
Why are we by all creatures waited on? | 8 |
Wilt thou love God as He thee? | 14 |
Autorská práva | |
Další části 35 nejsou zobrazeny.
Další vydání - Zobrazit všechny
Jacobean and Caroline Poetry: An Anthology Thomas Grant Steven Cain Náhled není k dispozici. - 1981 |
Běžně se vyskytující výrazy a sousloví
Andrew Marvell angels autumnal face beauty Ben Jonson blest blood body breast breath bright canst CORBILUS crown dead dear death decay delight divine Donne's dost doth Drayton dust earth Elysium epigram eyes fair fate fear fire flame flesh flowers give grace grave grief groat hair harmonious hath heart heaven Henry Vaughan Herbert Herrick Hesperides honour John Donne Jonson joys kings kiss light limbeck live look Lord love's lovers Lycidas lyric MICHAEL DRAYTON mistress Muses never night nymphs o'er poems poetry poets praise Prince Richard Crashaw Robert Herrick satyr sense shade Shakespeare shine sing Song Sonnet Sonnet 61 Sonnet 9 soul sphere spirit spring stars stay sweet tears thee thine things thou art thou hast thou shalt thought thyself tree truth turn twixt unto verse weep Whilst wind ΙΟ