Edmund Spencer: The Critical HeritageR. M. Cummings Routledge, 14 okt 2020 - 376 pagina's This book examines Edmund Spenser's essays. It presents the criticisms of John Dryden, which are determined by his own preoccupations than by his reading of other critics, and contains three larger sections (covering the periods 1579-1600, 1600-1660, 1660-1715) into which all this material falls. |
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Pagina xiii
... Lost Lovers (1651) 193 90 WILLIAM BASSE, from The Pastorals (1653) 194 91 SIR ROBERT SOUTHWELL, from his Commonplace Book (c. 1654) 195 92 93 SIR RICHARD FANSHAWE, from The Lusiad (1655) SAMUEL HOLLAND, from Don Zara del Fogo (1656) 196 ...
... Lost Lovers (1651) 193 90 WILLIAM BASSE, from The Pastorals (1653) 194 91 SIR ROBERT SOUTHWELL, from his Commonplace Book (c. 1654) 195 92 93 SIR RICHARD FANSHAWE, from The Lusiad (1655) SAMUEL HOLLAND, from Don Zara del Fogo (1656) 196 ...
Pagina xv
... Lost ( 1695 ) 234 117 LUKE MILBOURNE , from Notes on Dryden's Virgil ( 1698 ) 235 118 JOHN DENNIS ( 1698-1717 ) 236 ( a ) From The Usefulness of the Stage ( 1698 ) ( b ) From The Grounds of Criticism ( 1704 ) ( c ) From The Grounds of ...
... Lost ( 1695 ) 234 117 LUKE MILBOURNE , from Notes on Dryden's Virgil ( 1698 ) 235 118 JOHN DENNIS ( 1698-1717 ) 236 ( a ) From The Usefulness of the Stage ( 1698 ) ( b ) From The Grounds of Criticism ( 1704 ) ( c ) From The Grounds of ...
Pagina 6
... lost his liberty,' and when the same poet offers what he calls the 'first imitation of the verse of the Faerie Queene', it is a love poem he writes, modelled on Spenser's conceit of Cynthia.24 No doubt we forget to what extent even the ...
... lost his liberty,' and when the same poet offers what he calls the 'first imitation of the verse of the Faerie Queene', it is a love poem he writes, modelled on Spenser's conceit of Cynthia.24 No doubt we forget to what extent even the ...
Pagina 16
... Lost was published , the idea of a literary progress was once more reinforced , but again at Spenser's expense . Milton was held to be at once ethically and formally superior to Spenser . Paradise Lost was not the perfect neo ...
... Lost was published , the idea of a literary progress was once more reinforced , but again at Spenser's expense . Milton was held to be at once ethically and formally superior to Spenser . Paradise Lost was not the perfect neo ...
Pagina 60
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Inhoudsopgave
THE PERIOD 15791600 | 28 |
OBITUARY VERSE | 94 |
THE PERIOD 16001660 | 112 |
THE PERIOD 16601715 | 200 |
LANGUAGE AND STYLE | 279 |
BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES | 325 |
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
admirable Aeneid Allegory ancient Ariosto Author beautiful Book Britomartis Cambridge Canto Chaucer Colin College criticism Daniel Discourse diuine doth Drayton Dryden Eclogues edition Edmund Spenser educated England English Poet Epick epistle Essays euery excellent Fable Fairy fame famous Fancy Francis Beaumont Gabriel Harvey Genius Grosart Harvey hath haue headnote Heroick Homer honour Hughes Ibid imitated Invention Italian iudgement John Jonson kind Knight Language Latin learned Legend literary Lord loue Love manner matter Michael Drayton Milton modern Moral Muses neuer noble Numbers Oxford Pastoral perfect Persons Phineas Fletcher Poem Poesie Poet Poetical Poetry praise prefatory Queene II quotes Faerie Queene Reader repr Samuel Daniel seems severall Shakespeare Shepheardes Calender shew sigs Sir Philip Sidney Spenserian Stanza Story sweet Tasso thee Theocritus things Thomas thou thought translation vertues Virgil vnto vpon Westminster School William words worthy wou’d write written