Baroque Lyric PoetryYale University Press, 1961 - 244 стор. |
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Сторінка 126
... thou leftst them , or lie here with mee . Aske for those Kings whom thou saw'st yesterday , And thou shalt heare , All here in one bed lay . In the course of two stanzas the speaker's attitude of rude dismissal has gradually given way ...
... thou leftst them , or lie here with mee . Aske for those Kings whom thou saw'st yesterday , And thou shalt heare , All here in one bed lay . In the course of two stanzas the speaker's attitude of rude dismissal has gradually given way ...
Сторінка 233
... thou thus , Through windowes , and through curtaines call on us ? Must to thy motions lovers seasons run ? Sawcy ... thou thinke ? I could eclipse and cloud them with a winke , But that I would not lose her sight so long : If her eyes ...
... thou thus , Through windowes , and through curtaines call on us ? Must to thy motions lovers seasons run ? Sawcy ... thou thinke ? I could eclipse and cloud them with a winke , But that I would not lose her sight so long : If her eyes ...
Сторінка 237
... thou'rt not worth my least exclame , And plague enough thou hast in thy own shame . Do thy great worst , my friend and I have armes , Though not against thy strokes , against thy harmes . Rend us in sunder , thou canst not divide Our ...
... thou'rt not worth my least exclame , And plague enough thou hast in thy own shame . Do thy great worst , my friend and I have armes , Though not against thy strokes , against thy harmes . Rend us in sunder , thou canst not divide Our ...
Зміст
The Uses of Time in Poetry | 21 |
A Survey of Time Patterns | 37 |
Miltons Nativity Ode | 45 |
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achieved action actually addressed alternation aspect attempt attitude audience awareness Baroque become beginning body called characterization Christian complex concerned consider continues contrast course death defining described devices direct Donne effect elements evolution evolved example exist fact finally follow future Galatea gradual historical important instance Italy kind least less lines literary literature look lovers Lycidas lyric Marino means Milton move movement nature never pagan paradox particular passage past performance perhaps period person planes poem poetic poetry poets Polifemo possible present tense questions reader reference relation relationship remains Renaissance rhetorical situation seems seen sense serves simple speak speaker speaker's attitude stanza structure style suggest thou thought tion tradition true universal usual whole