Themes and Variations in Shakespeare's SonnetsRoutledge, 2013-04-15 - 256 psl. First published in 1961. |
Knygos viduje
Rezultatai 1–5 iš 35
22 psl.
... fame and perhaps only dimly aware of the mag- nitude of his own poetic genius , has written both more copiously and more memorably on this topic than any other sonneteer . It seems to be generally assumed , in a vague sort of way , that ...
... fame and perhaps only dimly aware of the mag- nitude of his own poetic genius , has written both more copiously and more memorably on this topic than any other sonneteer . It seems to be generally assumed , in a vague sort of way , that ...
25 psl.
... fame with which I am familiar is an essay by Oliver Elton , ' Literary Fame : a Renaissance Study ' in Otia Merseiana , Vol . IV , published for the University of Liver- pool by Williams and Norgate in 1904 , pp . 24 AT . 1 Shakespeare ...
... fame with which I am familiar is an essay by Oliver Elton , ' Literary Fame : a Renaissance Study ' in Otia Merseiana , Vol . IV , published for the University of Liver- pool by Williams and Norgate in 1904 , pp . 24 AT . 1 Shakespeare ...
27 psl.
... fame waxeth widely by favour of the Pierid daughters of Zeus . From the sixth Pythian , for Xenocrates of Acragas , where Pindar declares ( 11 . 1-18 ) that he is once more approaching the Delphic temple , where a treasure - house of ...
... fame waxeth widely by favour of the Pierid daughters of Zeus . From the sixth Pythian , for Xenocrates of Acragas , where Pindar declares ( 11 . 1-18 ) that he is once more approaching the Delphic temple , where a treasure - house of ...
28 psl.
... fame both for its author and for those he deigned to celebrate , and Professor Fraenkel has noticed1 that although , in the magnificent epilogue to the Third and last Book of his first published Odes , beginning Exegi monumentum aere ...
... fame both for its author and for those he deigned to celebrate , and Professor Fraenkel has noticed1 that although , in the magnificent epilogue to the Third and last Book of his first published Odes , beginning Exegi monumentum aere ...
29 psl.
... fame upon those it celebrates , Horace now reaches what one is almost tempted to regard as his ostensible rather than his real subject , and declares that he will not allow the great public virtues of Lollius to fall into oblivion ...
... fame upon those it celebrates , Horace now reaches what one is almost tempted to regard as his ostensible rather than his real subject , and declares that he will not allow the great public virtues of Lollius to fall into oblivion ...
Turinys
9 | |
25 | |
44 | |
Shakespeare and Tasso 53 358 | 53 |
Shakespeare and his English predecessors | 69 |
DEVOURING TIME AND FADING BEAUTY FROM | 93 |
Shakespeares sonnets on Love as the Defier of Time | 102 |
The instinctiveness and unphilosophicalness of Shakespeares | 119 |
Personifications of Time Age and Youth by Ovid Horace | 134 |
Tragedy and the Whole Truth | 142 |
Kiti leidimai - Peržiūrėti viską
Pagrindiniai terminai ir frazės
able absence achieved addressed Aeschylus already ancient appears attempt beauty beginning beloved better called celebrated characteristic comparable compensation concerned concluding continually death declares described despite distinction Donne Donne's doth doubt earth edition Elizabethan eternal example expression eyes fact fair fame feel flowers give hand hath heart heaven Horace's hyperbole idea imitated immortality impression inspired kind later Laura least less lines live love-poetry lover manner means memorable merely metaphor mind Nature never odes once partly passages perhaps person Petrarch phrase Platonism poems poetic poetry poets possible probably professes quoted regarded religious remain remarked Renaissance Ronsard seems sense Shakespeare Shakespeare's sonnets sometimes soul speaks spirit style suggested suppose sweet thee theme things thou thought topic true verse whole writing written young youth