An Introduction to Literature, Teil 3Herbert Barrows, Gordon Norton Ray Houghton Mifflin, 1959 - 1331 Seiten This collection is designed to introduce college students to literature. Each volume focuses on a specific area, wherein the characteristics, conventions, and special effects of each kind of writing are set out, the critical terms are introduced, and each editor brings their viewpoint to the task. The editors of this book see literature as an unending source of delight, and propose analysis to the student not as an end in itself, but as a means of widening the range of comprehension, the deepening of enjoyment for literature as more fully comprehended. Each book features introductions that explore the type of literature addressed, brief author biographies, and a series of questions designed to allow students to exercise their critical and analytical faculties. |
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Seite 828
... rose , shrank like a thing reproved . And many more , whose names on earth are dark But whose transmitted effluence cannot die So long as fire outlives the parent spark , Rose , robed in dazzling immortality . " Thou art become as one ...
... rose , shrank like a thing reproved . And many more , whose names on earth are dark But whose transmitted effluence cannot die So long as fire outlives the parent spark , Rose , robed in dazzling immortality . " Thou art become as one ...
Seite 858
Herbert Barrows, Gordon Norton Ray. Rose Aylmer Walter Savage Landor Ah , what avails the sceptred race , Ah , what the form divine ! What every virtue , every grace ! Rose Aylmer , all were thine . Rose Aylmer , whom these wakeful eyes ...
Herbert Barrows, Gordon Norton Ray. Rose Aylmer Walter Savage Landor Ah , what avails the sceptred race , Ah , what the form divine ! What every virtue , every grace ! Rose Aylmer , all were thine . Rose Aylmer , whom these wakeful eyes ...
Seite 867
... rose , " says Burns . The reader knows what a red red rose is , but he does not know what " my luve ” is in Burns ' way of thinking . By applying his known feelings for " red red rose " to his un- formed sense of " my luve , " however ...
... rose , " says Burns . The reader knows what a red red rose is , but he does not know what " my luve ” is in Burns ' way of thinking . By applying his known feelings for " red red rose " to his un- formed sense of " my luve , " however ...
Inhalt
INTRODUCTORY NOTE | 663 |
CHAPTER TWO A BURBLE | 678 |
FOLK BALLADS | 685 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
adjectives Albatross anapestic Archibald MacLeish ballad beauty Berkeley bird boomlay breath Burns caesura CALIFORNIA LIBRARY catalogue certainly Childe Maurice connotations Copyright dark dead death denotation diction doth dream English example eyes fact fair feel flowers foot fulcrum Hamish hand hath heart heaven iambic images Jabberwocky John Donne Karl Shapiro Keats Kenneth Rexroth language light live look Lord Mariner metaphor metrics monosyllabic moon motion move never night Note o'er passage pause phrase play poet poetic poetry QUESTIONS reader Reprinted by permission rhyme Robert Frost rose round sails scansion seems sense ship silence sing Sir Patrick Spens sleep smile song sort soul sound Squid stanza statement stressed suggestion sweet symbol tell tends thee thing thou thought tone unstressed syllables voice W. B. Yeats W. H. Auden William William Butler Yeats William Carlos Williams wind words