Cavalier PoetsBritish Council, 1960 - 52 sidor |
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Sida 18
... occasionally does a passage of blank verse or ( more frequently ) a passage of prose surprise us with its vigour , if not with its sense . The language is at once pedestrian and pretentious , as if the intention to write a play had ...
... occasionally does a passage of blank verse or ( more frequently ) a passage of prose surprise us with its vigour , if not with its sense . The language is at once pedestrian and pretentious , as if the intention to write a play had ...
Sida 29
... occasionally appears to be anything more than a well- mannered and graceful diversion for the cultured reader . These diversions can , however , have a musical purity , a formal elegance that the wilder poems of Carew or Suckling never ...
... occasionally appears to be anything more than a well- mannered and graceful diversion for the cultured reader . These diversions can , however , have a musical purity , a formal elegance that the wilder poems of Carew or Suckling never ...
Sida 34
... psychologically illuminating , and this particular anecdote hits off Waller perfectly . We may , in reading Lovelace , feel occasionally that the stylist has got the better of the artist in him ; with Waller 34 CAVALIER POETS EDMUND WALLER.
... psychologically illuminating , and this particular anecdote hits off Waller perfectly . We may , in reading Lovelace , feel occasionally that the stylist has got the better of the artist in him ; with Waller 34 CAVALIER POETS EDMUND WALLER.
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accept amateur amusement attitude Aurelian Townshend beauty Bonamy Dobrée C. V. Wedgwood careless ease Carew and Suckling casual CAVALIER POETS charm commonplace conceits contrived conventional craftsmanship decorative do't Donne Dryden E. W. F. Tomlin Edmund Blunden EDMUND WALLER eighteenth century elaborate elegance Elegie emotion enjoy enjoyment expect eyes fancy fashion feel G. S. Fraser give H. J. C. Grierson heart Herbert of Cherbury heroic couplet humour impression ingenious Jonson Kenneth lines literary Lord Herbert love thee Lovelace's lover lyrical poetry M. C. Bradbrook Marquis of Montrose Mistress moral statement musical never occasionally once Oxford passionate Petrarchan poet's poetic portrait praise pretentious Prithee reader RICHARD LOVELACE ROBIN SKELTON Royalists sense SEVENTEENTH CENTURY simply sing SIR JOHN SUCKLING smooth song soule speaker speech strong masculine style Suckling or Carew Suckling's sweet and fair thine THOMAS CAREW Thomas Randolph thou tone verses vigour William Habington witty writes wrote young zest