Fleeting Things: English Poets and Poems, 1616-1660Harvard University Press, 1990 - 394 Seiten Offers new interpretations of poems by Milton, Jonson, Herrick, and Lovelace, and looks at five themes in seventeenth century English poetry. |
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Seite 28
... court lay at the center of the city , Carew's poem to Townshend shows how alienated the two were becoming from each other . Just as in Fanshawe's poem , the court now stands for some sort of country ideal . Poets like Townshend and ...
... court lay at the center of the city , Carew's poem to Townshend shows how alienated the two were becoming from each other . Just as in Fanshawe's poem , the court now stands for some sort of country ideal . Poets like Townshend and ...
Seite 91
... Court , now to be re- duced to a prisoner under house arrest in the same place . Instead it means what it says , with no apparent undertone , as if the king were still at the center of adoring throngs of supplicants . While Herrick ...
... Court , now to be re- duced to a prisoner under house arrest in the same place . Instead it means what it says , with no apparent undertone , as if the king were still at the center of adoring throngs of supplicants . While Herrick ...
Seite 112
... court masques ; but so morally vacuous were these entertain- ments that Jonson might well have countered to the effect that with someone like Inigo Jones in control of the spectacle it was virtually im- possible not to consider them as ...
... court masques ; but so morally vacuous were these entertain- ments that Jonson might well have countered to the effect that with someone like Inigo Jones in control of the spectacle it was virtually im- possible not to consider them as ...
Inhalt
Thresholds I | 1 |
Praising and Blaming | 15 |
Strafford and Buckingham | 41 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
action appear ballad become begins Bermudas body called century Charles Charles's church close comes common contrast court dead death describes doth English epigram example experience expression eyes face fair fall fear final follow give given hair hand hath head heart Herbert Herrick hope idea ideal John Jonson keep kind king king's lady least leave light lines live look lost means Milton mind move nature never offer once opening peace perhaps piece play poem poet poetry political possible praise present proverb Puritan reader rest restoration rose seas seems sense Shakespeare ship soul stand stanza sweet thee things thou thought tion true turns unto verse whole wind write written