A guide to English literature. 3. From Donne to MarvellBoris Ford Penguin Books, 1956 |
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Page 49
... sense of officious pry- ing ) - ' Must to thy motions ... ? ' - ' houres , dayes , moneths , which are the rags of time ' . Stress , intonation , gesture almost , are imposed on us as we read ; we have the sense of a living speech ...
... sense of officious pry- ing ) - ' Must to thy motions ... ? ' - ' houres , dayes , moneths , which are the rags of time ' . Stress , intonation , gesture almost , are imposed on us as we read ; we have the sense of a living speech ...
Page 128
... sense also of the theologians such as Hooker and even of the Euphuists . Lyly and Sidney , for example , were more elaborate than Sir Thomas Browne in their stylistic devices , but these sprang more directly from their emotional ...
... sense also of the theologians such as Hooker and even of the Euphuists . Lyly and Sidney , for example , were more elaborate than Sir Thomas Browne in their stylistic devices , but these sprang more directly from their emotional ...
Page 198
... sense of death or destruction , would herself be destroyed . So fate separates them with her decrees of steel like the sword placed down the middle of the bed to ensure chastity . Though the whole world of love ' wheels ' ( or ' whirls ...
... sense of death or destruction , would herself be destroyed . So fate separates them with her decrees of steel like the sword placed down the middle of the bed to ensure chastity . Though the whole world of love ' wheels ' ( or ' whirls ...
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achieved appear argument authority became beginning body Book called Cambridge character characteristic Charles Christian Church Civil classical common complete concerned contemporary Court critical death described direct discussion divine Donne Donne's early effect Elizabethan English epigram Essays example experience expression feeling followed further gives hand Herbert History human ideas imagery influence intellectual interest Italy John Jonson kind language later learning less lines literary literature living London lyric manner Marvell meaning Metaphysical Milton mind moral nature Oxford passages period play poem poetic poetry poets political present prose published Puritan reader reading reason religious remains Restoration seems sense Seventeenth Century social society soul spirit style suggests theme things Thomas thou thought tion tone tradition universe verse whole writing wrote