Formula, Character, and Context: Studies in Homeric, Old English, and Old Testament PoetryCenter for Hellenic Studies, 1969 - 225 Seiten |
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Seite 24
... Queen of the silent night Doth cause the ocean to attend upon her , And he , as long as she is in his sight , With his full tide is ready her to honor ; But when the silver waggon of the Moon Is mounted up so high he cannot follow , The ...
... Queen of the silent night Doth cause the ocean to attend upon her , And he , as long as she is in his sight , With his full tide is ready her to honor ; But when the silver waggon of the Moon Is mounted up so high he cannot follow , The ...
Seite 27
... Queen Bess . How are we to explain the difference in these two poems , both written by the same poet ? In one he welcomes old age and says that it has brought him wisdom and sharpened his pen . In the other he laments old age and says ...
... Queen Bess . How are we to explain the difference in these two poems , both written by the same poet ? In one he welcomes old age and says that it has brought him wisdom and sharpened his pen . In the other he laments old age and says ...
Seite 28
... Queen Bess . If indeed the young people go at a pretty fast pace for an old man , and if the poet surprises in him- self a half - wish that they would slow down a bit and that the girls would " pant less , " he recognizes this wish for ...
... Queen Bess . If indeed the young people go at a pretty fast pace for an old man , and if the poet surprises in him- self a half - wish that they would slow down a bit and that the girls would " pant less , " he recognizes this wish for ...
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
aesthetic ambiguity apple Apple-Picking arts attitude Black birds Blake's blunt and flaccid burglars butterflies complex concept criticism dear Mary dictionary discourse Dover Beach Echoing Green effect Emily Dickinson emphasis essay example explicit flower frame thy fearful free verse Frost halfcocked heart herb or tree images implications implicit important irony Jonathan Cape Josephine Miles Keats kind of meaning kirkward language Laurence Perrine lexical lines literal Maisie Marvell's measure metaphor meter metrical stress moon negative old age once a lover pair of poems Paradise Lost pattern perhaps phrase pleasure plowman homeward plods pocked poet poetic poetry professions Puritan Queen relation rhymes romantic second poem sense Shadwell Shakespeare's sonnet simple single herb soft embrace sound stanza structure syllables symbol tence thing third stanza thy fearful symmetry tion tone verse W. K. Wimsatt Walter Savage Landor waltz whispering bushes whole word wrecked in noon young lady