Byron: A Collection of Critical EssaysPaul West Prentice-Hall, 1963 - 175 sider In this volume, some of the foremost writers and critics of our time interpret Byron's work and personality, emphasizing the inseparable link between the artist and the man. |
Inni boken
Resultat 1-3 av 24
Side 61
... passage could be Rogers , and is anybody ; it is built according to the book , with all the right devices . Obviously Byron shared Milton's addiction to the large unit — the paragraph and the self - fed declaration ; but he had little ...
... passage could be Rogers , and is anybody ; it is built according to the book , with all the right devices . Obviously Byron shared Milton's addiction to the large unit — the paragraph and the self - fed declaration ; but he had little ...
Side 69
... passage was a personal grievance . He thought Sotheby was the anonymous author of a letter sent to him in Rome with a marked up copy of a volume of Byron's poetry containing unfavorable criticism . Out of this pique came a new passage ...
... passage was a personal grievance . He thought Sotheby was the anonymous author of a letter sent to him in Rome with a marked up copy of a volume of Byron's poetry containing unfavorable criticism . Out of this pique came a new passage ...
Side 132
... passage dealing with the familiar theme of the connection between literature and society . Here it is specifically verbal obscurity and social violence ( war ) . After converting Castlereagh into a sphinx ( " That monstrous hieroglyphic ...
... passage dealing with the familiar theme of the connection between literature and society . Here it is specifically verbal obscurity and social violence ( war ) . After converting Castlereagh into a sphinx ( " That monstrous hieroglyphic ...
Innhold
INTRODUCTIONPaul West | 1 |
THE TWO ETERNITIES 1939G Wilson Knight | 15 |
GUILT AND RETRIBUTION IN BYRONS SEA POEMS 1961 | 31 |
Opphavsrett | |
12 andre deler vises ikke
Andre utgaver - Vis alle
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
action alliteration already appear become Beppo Byron called Canto century character Childe Harold couplet course deal death Don Juan edited effect element emotional English epic essay eternity example experience expression eyes fact fair Fall feel finally force give given hand head heart hero human idea important interest irony Italy kind Lady later least leaves less letter literary lives look Lord manner means merely mind moral nature never once passage passion perhaps phrase plays poem poet poetry present reason revision rhetorical rhyme romantic Satan satiric seems seen sense social society sound spirit stanzas suggest surely theme thing thought tion tone true turn University verse whole women writing written