The Complete English Poems of Thomas GrayHeinemann, 1973 - 121 sider |
Inni boken
Resultat 1-3 av 10
Side 3
... becoming fixed . With it went a depression which he was already familiar with : Low spirits ( he wrote to West ) are my true and faithful companions ; they get up with me , make journeys and returns as I do ; nay , and pay me visits ...
... becoming fixed . With it went a depression which he was already familiar with : Low spirits ( he wrote to West ) are my true and faithful companions ; they get up with me , make journeys and returns as I do ; nay , and pay me visits ...
Side 16
... become tinged with pathos . Indeed , in these carlier stanzas , there had been some bitter irony . An ' animated ... becomes all the more ruthless . It is already clear that under the smooth and measured language of the Elegy there is a ...
... become tinged with pathos . Indeed , in these carlier stanzas , there had been some bitter irony . An ' animated ... becomes all the more ruthless . It is already clear that under the smooth and measured language of the Elegy there is a ...
Side 18
... become a farcical post and he was later to decline it . We have seen already how he thought that his sensibility set him apart , and by having a ' hoary - headed swain ' recount his story with a mixture of awe and incomprehension , this ...
... become a farcical post and he was later to decline it . We have seen already how he thought that his sensibility set him apart , and by having a ' hoary - headed swain ' recount his story with a mixture of awe and incomprehension , this ...
Innhold
INTRODUCTION | 1 |
SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHY | 35 |
Sonnet on the Death of Mr Richard West | 52 |
Opphavsrett | |
6 andre deler vises ikke
Andre utgaver - Vis alle
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
Agrippina Alliance of Education ancient Anicetus antistrophe Baiae Bard beneath Bishop of Chester breast breath brow Cambridge Corr death deep diction Distant Prospect divine dread Elegy epigraph Epitaph epode Eton College eyes fame fate favourite fear feeling flowers glittering goddess golden Grande Chartreuse Gray's note Greek mythology heart honour James Reeves John Dennis King lines Lord lyre Martin Seymour-Smith Mason Master melancholy Milton morn mother Muse Muse's nature Nero night Notebooks o'er Ode to Adversity Odin Otho pain passions Pindaric Pindaric Ode pleasure poem poet poetic poetry Poppaea Progress of Poesy Prospect of Eton Quadruple Alliance reign Richard West Rome rustic satire scene seen shade Shakespeare sigh Sisters smile soft song Sonnet soul spirit spring stanza Stoke Poges sweet tear thee Thomas Gray thou thought Tophet trembling vale Walpole weep wing wrote youth ΙΟ
Referanser til denne boken
Speak Silence: Rhetoric and Culture in Blake's Poetical Sketches Mark L. Greenberg Begrenset visning - 1996 |