Carew, Suckling, and Lovelace: A ReappraisalStanford University, 1963 - 152 sidor |
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Sida 48
... perhaps passimistic quality of the last two lines , " They can add little unto bliss / Who cannot wish . " In asking his King to awaken as the sun has done , Suckling is only asking the King to take his position in the hierarchy of ...
... perhaps passimistic quality of the last two lines , " They can add little unto bliss / Who cannot wish . " In asking his King to awaken as the sun has done , Suckling is only asking the King to take his position in the hierarchy of ...
Sida 57
... perhaps for this reason that we can so easily fit Puttenham's terms to Carew , while we find less poetry in Suckling that can be illuminated in the same way . Another probable reason for these differences is that whereas Carew's verse ...
... perhaps for this reason that we can so easily fit Puttenham's terms to Carew , while we find less poetry in Suckling that can be illuminated in the same way . Another probable reason for these differences is that whereas Carew's verse ...
Sida 73
... perhaps Lovelace and Carew and Suckling were men of too many parts , that they should have tried to do a few things very well instead of pursuing the many paths of the courtier . What good verse we do have from the court poets 73 .
... perhaps Lovelace and Carew and Suckling were men of too many parts , that they should have tried to do a few things very well instead of pursuing the many paths of the courtier . What good verse we do have from the court poets 73 .
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Alice Walker Allegoria allegorical appear argues artificiality artistic Aurelian Townshend beauty blind mole discern bright sun survey Carew's poetry Carew's verse Caroline lyric Caroline poets Caroline verse Cavalier Celia's classical commentary complaint contemporary context convention counterfeit figure counterfeit representation court poets critical debt to Jonson discern not day disdain divine Donne tradition eaglets the bright elegy Elizabethan emotional English Literature English Poetry F. R. Leavis fate George Puttenham George Williamson Grasshopper Gratiana Grierson heart History of English human hyperbolic Icon inconstancy influence Kathleen Lynch King language Leavis Let eaglets logic lover Lucasta Master Figures metaphysical conceits Miss Miles Miss Tuve mistress mode of persuasion parabolic particular Philip Bliss poem's Poems of Thomas poet's Puttenham relationship Renaissance Restoration Comedy rhetorical rhetoricians Richard Lovelace satire Seventeenth Century speaker stanza statistical surveys Suckling and Lovelace Suckling's poetry Suckling's verse suggests talents thee themes Thomas Carew tion trope tropology