The Pelican Guide to English Literature, Volume 1Penguin Books, 1962 |
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Page 50
... Shakespeare . In these plays it is of no use always to be looking for something in one of the characters to account for what happens . The dramatis personae can be vivid persons or presences , created in the poetry of the dialogues and ...
... Shakespeare . In these plays it is of no use always to be looking for something in one of the characters to account for what happens . The dramatis personae can be vivid persons or presences , created in the poetry of the dialogues and ...
Page 146
... Shakespeare's line – - Devouring Time , blunt thou the lion's paw . ( Sonnet xix ) The feeling of the sonnets is something new and complex . It is ob- tained here by transforming the epithet ' devouring ' , which belongs naturally to ...
... Shakespeare's line – - Devouring Time , blunt thou the lion's paw . ( Sonnet xix ) The feeling of the sonnets is something new and complex . It is ob- tained here by transforming the epithet ' devouring ' , which belongs naturally to ...
Page 158
... Shakespeare . This is also a hint that its enjoyment is a necessary preparation for an enjoyment of Shakespeare , because Shakespeare's poetry is the culmination of those tendencies that are active in Sir Gawayne and the Grene Knight ...
... Shakespeare . This is also a hint that its enjoyment is a necessary preparation for an enjoyment of Shakespeare , because Shakespeare's poetry is the culmination of those tendencies that are active in Sir Gawayne and the Grene Knight ...
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Expressions et termes fréquents
allegory alliterative appon ballads bifore Breton Lays Cambridge Canterbury Tales Chapel Chaucer Church courtly courtly love Cycle dede Degare dere deth doun drama Dunbar eche EETS Elizabethan England English Literature fifteenth century fourteenth century FOURTH SOLDIER freke French gode Grene Knight grete hathel Haylle hede hert heven honde human king kyng lady Langland lede leve literary loke londe London lorde Middle Ages Middle English mony moral Morality Play myght never noght Orfeo Oxford Piers Plowman plays poem poet poetry prose quath quoth reader religious riche romances sayde SECOND SHEPHERD SECOND SOLDIER segge seyd shal shulde Sir Gawayne Sir Orfeo sithen sone sothe Spenser tale thanne thay thee Thenne ther THIRD SHEPHERD THIRD SOLDIER thoght thou thre thurgh tradition Troilus and Criseyde verse W. W. Skeat wele whan wighe wolde words Wyatt Wynnere