The Complete English Poems of Thomas GrayHeinemann, 1973 - 121 sider |
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Side 30
... fate , Beneath the Good how far - but far above the Great . The fifth line of the epode wonderfully expresses the awful silence that marks the end of a great culture . One is reminded of these lines from the Pervigilium Veneris , that ...
... fate , Beneath the Good how far - but far above the Great . The fifth line of the epode wonderfully expresses the awful silence that marks the end of a great culture . One is reminded of these lines from the Pervigilium Veneris , that ...
Side 77
... fate , Beneath the Good how far - but far above the Great . The Bard A Pindaric Ode I. I ' Ruin seize thee , ruthless king ! ' Confusion on thy banners wait , " Though fanned by Conquest's crimson wing " They mock the air with idle ...
... fate , Beneath the Good how far - but far above the Great . The Bard A Pindaric Ode I. I ' Ruin seize thee , ruthless king ! ' Confusion on thy banners wait , " Though fanned by Conquest's crimson wing " They mock the air with idle ...
Side 87
... fate we tread . Wading through the ensanguined field : Gondula and Geira , spread O'er the youthful King your shield . We the reins to slaughter give , Ours to kill and ours to spare : Spite of danger he shall live . ( Weave the crimson ...
... fate we tread . Wading through the ensanguined field : Gondula and Geira , spread O'er the youthful King your shield . We the reins to slaughter give , Ours to kill and ours to spare : Spite of danger he shall live . ( Weave the crimson ...
Innhold
INTRODUCTION | 1 |
SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHY | 35 |
Sonnet on the Death of Mr Richard West | 52 |
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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 |