The New Oxford Book of Seventeenth Century VerseAlastair Fowler, Regius Professor Emeritus of Rhetoric and English Literature Alastair Fowler Oxford University Press, 1991 - 831 páginas The seventeenth century saw some of the great achievements in the English language. Milton wrote Paradise Lost, Donne composed his Metaphysical verse, and Shakespeare his late Romances, not to mention the work of Dryden, Marvell, Jonson, and many others. Now, this remarkable quantity of extraordinary literature has been brought together here in one large volume. Like the previous edition, all of the best known works are present, but this new edition also responds to considerable changes in scholarship and perspective in recent years. Popular and minor poets take a place alongside their more well known peers. Alastair Fowler, the collection's distinguished editor, has included a generous portion of poetry by women, as well as a sampling of American colonial verse, while also striking a balance between Metaphysical and Jonsonian poetry. |
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Página 6
7 from A Treaty of Human Learning The mind of man is this world's true dimension , And knowledge is the measure of the mind ; And as the mind in her vast comprehension Contains more worlds than all the world can find , So knowledge doth ...
7 from A Treaty of Human Learning The mind of man is this world's true dimension , And knowledge is the measure of the mind ; And as the mind in her vast comprehension Contains more worlds than all the world can find , So knowledge doth ...
Página 200
IO Of recreation there is none So free as fishing is alone ; All other pastimes do no less Than mind and body doth possess : My hand alone my work can do , So I can fish and study too . 20 I care not , I , to fish in seas , Fresh rivers ...
IO Of recreation there is none So free as fishing is alone ; All other pastimes do no less Than mind and body doth possess : My hand alone my work can do , So I can fish and study too . 20 I care not , I , to fish in seas , Fresh rivers ...
Página 482
10 Nor is it such wonder now in thee , No more of the world nor things dost know : That all thy thoughts of the ground should be , And mind on things so poor and low . But that man so base mind should bear To fix it on a clod of ground ...
10 Nor is it such wonder now in thee , No more of the world nor things dost know : That all thy thoughts of the ground should be , And mind on things so poor and low . But that man so base mind should bear To fix it on a clod of ground ...
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Contenido
Abbreviations | xxxvi |
BEN JONSON 15721637 | xxxvii |
Acknowledgements | xlv |
Derechos de autor | |
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Términos y frases comunes
appear arms bear beauty blood body breast breath bright bring crown dead dear death delight desire dost doth Earth Epigram eyes face fair fall fate fear fire flame flowers friends give glory grace grave grow hand hast hath head heart heaven honour hope keep kind king kiss leave less light live look Lord mind move Muses nature never night once pain play pleasure poor praise prove rest rich rise rose round sense shade shine sight sing sleep Song soul spirits spring stand stars stay sweet tears tell thee thine things thou thought tree true turn unto virtue Whilst wind wings wish
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Language and Literary Structure: The Linguistic Analysis of Form in Verse ... Nigel Fabb Vista previa limitada - 2002 |