| Blanford Parker - 1998 - 282 páginas
...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,... | |
| Richard M. Hogg, Norman Francis Blake, Roger Lass, R. W. Burchfield - 1992 - 812 páginas
...(97) a) Nay oft in Dreams, Invention we bestow, To change a Flounce or add a Furbelow b) I lere thou, great Anna! whom three realms obey, Dost sometimes Counsel take — and sometimes Tea. (Pope 1714) 632 The age of the heroic couplet, from its re-founding to its decline, is 1585—1785;... | |
| J. McLaverty - 2001 - 286 páginas
...first version of the poem, it is with a characteristic playing with syllepsis: Here Brstasn,s Siatesmen oft the Fall foredoom Of Foreign Tyrants, and of Nymphs at home; Here Thou, great Anna! whom three Realms obey, Dost sometimes Counsel iake — and sometimes Tra. ( i .... | |
| Neil King, Sarah King - 2002 - 214 páginas
...anticlimax in poetry comes in Pope's THE RAPE OF THE LjX;K when it describes Hampton Court Palace: Here Britain's statesmen oft the fall foredoom Of foreign tyrants, and of nymphs at home; Here them. Great Anna! whom three realms obey Dost sometimes council take - and sometimes tea. [the final... | |
| Victor Hugo - 2002 - 348 páginas
...used with two different words or phrases (usually direct objects), as in Alexander Pope's 'Here thou, great Anna! whom three realms obey,/ Dost sometimes counsel take — and sometimes Tea.' Hypallage occurs when a word is made to refer to some word other than the one it logically qualifies,... | |
| 2005 - 656 páginas
...the Lock during the eighteenth century included his well-known reference to Queen Anne: Here thou, great Anna! whom three realms obey, Dost sometimes Counsel take and sometimes Tea. (Pope, 1965:96) 293 Mrs. Gaskell, during the nineteenth century, calls one of the chapters in her novel... | |
| Thomas Carlyle - 2002 - 1258 páginas
...Resartus. 27.10. tea-tables, council-tables: See Pope's "The Rape of the Lock" (1714): "Here thou, great Anna! whom three realms obey, / Dost sometimes counsel take — and sometimes tea" (3.7-8). 27.15-16. Time and all Eternity, is the constant Speaker and Doer of Truth: Borrowing in part... | |
| W. H. Auden - 2004 - 604 páginas
...pride surveys his rising towers, There stands a structure of majestic frame, Which from the neighb'ring Hampton takes its name. Here Britain's statesmen oft...foredoom Of foreign tyrants and of nymphs at home; Here thou, great ANNA ! whom three realms obey, Dost sometimes counsel take — and sometimes tea. Hither... | |
| Timothy Wilson-Smith - 2004 - 174 páginas
...daughter tried to live in state in the renovated palace up the Thames, where, in Pope's words: '. . .Thou, Great Anna, whom three realms obey/ Dost sometimes Counsel take — and sometimes Tea.'22 Meanwhile, in Piccadilly aristocrats had built grand town houses like Devonshire House (pulled... | |
| F. H. Buckley - 2003 - 264 páginas
...sudden turnabout — is why Pope's abrupt descent to whimsy in The Rape of the Loch amuses: Here Thou, great Anna! whom three Realms obey Dost sometimes Counsel take — and sometimes Tea. Few things annoy more than the person who thinks himself amusing hut who fails to surprise. We feel... | |
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