| 2005 - 276 str.
...point or draw attention to a falseness. The most famous example is from Pope's "Rape of the Lock": "Here thou, great Anna! whom three realms obey, /Dost sometimes counsel take — and sometimes tea." The humor in the bathos is the fact that Anna is the Queen of England — she holds meetings in the... | |
| Janet Whitcut - 1996 - 184 str.
[ Omlouváme se, ale obsah této stránky je nepřístupný. ] | |
| Charles Jones - 1995 - 292 str.
[ Omlouváme se, ale obsah této stránky je nepřístupný. ] | |
| Charles Jones - 1997 - 712 str.
[ Omlouváme se, ale obsah této stránky je nepřístupný. ] | |
| Stephen Adams - 1997 - 260 str.
...fingers, me thy lips, to kiss. Not surprisingly, then, the master of zeugma is Pope at his wittiest: Here thou, great Anna! whom three realms obey, Dost sometimes counsel take, and sometimes tea. Atoms or systems into ruin hurl'd, And now a bubble burst, and now a world. Great Anna, queen of the... | |
| Ovid - 1998 - 596 str.
...here may have influenced Pope's more famous syllepsis in The Rape of the Lock (1714; Canto 3. 7—8): Here Thou, Great Anna! whom three Realms obey, Dost sometimes Counsel take — and sometimes Tea. Eusden, adapting Sandys, succeeds at a comparable witticism in Book 10, when Venus rests on the ground... | |
| Blanford Parker - 1998 - 282 str.
...elements of the incipient commercial culture. Queen Anne is simply another Belinda, and the famous zeugma "Here Thou, Great Anna! whom three Realms obey, / Dost sometimes Counsel take - and sometimes Tea"(m, 7-8) expressly refers to the British Isles and those "realms beyond 23 Geoffrey Tillotson,... | |
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