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. |
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Seite 33
... Nature provides a Harmony for me This Airy quire , chanting out Mellody So sweet , so pleasant by zephires pride , I have a satisfaction here I abide ; But what's this Nature , wch . such order keepes , That every plant in its due ...
... Nature provides a Harmony for me This Airy quire , chanting out Mellody So sweet , so pleasant by zephires pride , I have a satisfaction here I abide ; But what's this Nature , wch . such order keepes , That every plant in its due ...
Seite 70
... nature . And within the rec- iprocal rather than dominating relation of self to self and self to nature , the relation of a woman to another can be situated - more especially the female Other , the friend . Indeed , the very categories ...
... nature . And within the rec- iprocal rather than dominating relation of self to self and self to nature , the relation of a woman to another can be situated - more especially the female Other , the friend . Indeed , the very categories ...
Seite 72
... Nature itself is an object of deep affection - but especially now , when it can momentarily be seen as experi- enced in itself , or nearly so , without the kind of order imposed by " Tyrant man ” who really confuses matters - being ...
... Nature itself is an object of deep affection - but especially now , when it can momentarily be seen as experi- enced in itself , or nearly so , without the kind of order imposed by " Tyrant man ” who really confuses matters - being ...
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Aemilia Lanyer affections allusion animal Anna Anna Seward Anne Beachy Head bird botany British Cavendish Charlotte Smith Christ context countess Cowper critical Curran daughter death Desmond devotional poetry devotional verse early modern ecology edition eighteenth century Elegiac Sonnets Elizabeth Emigrants England English essay example exile fairy feeling Felicia Hemans female feminine figure Finch's France French French Revolution gender green language Hare human hunting Jane Cavendish John John Clare Lady Levinson lines London lyric male manuscript Margaret Margaret Cavendish Mary Shelley Mary Shelley's Mary Sidney masculine meditation Mellor Milton Miss Darlington mother narrative Natural History Oxford Passion poem's poet poetic political praise Psalms published quotation Republican Review Revolution Romantic Fragment Poem Romanticism Salve Deus Rex scene sense seventeenth-century Shelley shepherd social social ecology Sonnet 61 sympathy tion trope Valperga volume William Wollstonecraft woman women poets women writers women's poetry Wordsworth writing