Forging Connections: Women's Poetry from the Renaissance to RomanticismHuntington Library, 2002 - 162 Seiten Essays by John Rogers, Helen Wilcox, Donna Landry, Margaret A. Doody, Susan J. Wolfson, John M. Anderson, and Stuart Curran on the way that women poets found their vocation. |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 23
Seite 22
... less concern in the early modern period than in later centuries . Many of the devotional poems by seventeenth - century women appear in commonplace books and poetic miscellanies rather than in single - authored published volumes . In ...
... less concern in the early modern period than in later centuries . Many of the devotional poems by seventeenth - century women appear in commonplace books and poetic miscellanies rather than in single - authored published volumes . In ...
Seite 65
... less connected , are of still less importance to one another ; and the affection gradually diminishes as the relation grows more and more remote " ( p . 220 ) . There is in Smith's analysis a kind of diagram of concentric circles of ...
... less connected , are of still less importance to one another ; and the affection gradually diminishes as the relation grows more and more remote " ( p . 220 ) . There is in Smith's analysis a kind of diagram of concentric circles of ...
Seite 139
... less surprising to discover parallels between Smith's first extended blank verse work and her second than to find echoes of less familiar shorter works written across the period of more than a decade separating The Emigrants from Beachy ...
... less surprising to discover parallels between Smith's first extended blank verse work and her second than to find echoes of less familiar shorter works written across the period of more than a decade separating The Emigrants from Beachy ...
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
addressed affections animal Anne appears Beachy Head become beginning bird Book British called Cavendish century Charlotte Smith Christ claim close collection connections context critical daughter death describes devotional early edition eighteenth Elizabeth Emigrants England English essay example expression feeling female field figure fragment France French friends gender give hand History human hunting interest John Lady Lanyer later less Letters lines literary living London lyric male manuscript Margaret Mary Mary Sidney means mind mother narrative nature object observed original Oxford Passion perhaps poem poet poetic poetry political praise present published quotation readers Reflections relation Review Romantic scene seems sense Sidney Smith social Sonnets suggest sympathy thought tion tradition true turn University verse voice volume woman women women poets writing written York young