English Pastoral PoetryTwayne Publishers, 1983 - 160 pagina's |
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Pagina 59
... popular broadside ballads sung and sold by itinerant ballad - singers are many fine pastorals which testify to the fact that the period from the acces- sion of Elizabeth to the outbreak of the Civil War was the golden age of popular ...
... popular broadside ballads sung and sold by itinerant ballad - singers are many fine pastorals which testify to the fact that the period from the acces- sion of Elizabeth to the outbreak of the Civil War was the golden age of popular ...
Pagina 60
... popular type , but the division between courtly and popular is not hard and fast , and many of the great successes of Elizabethan - Jacobean pastoral lyric occur where courtly- classical and Renaissance - Italian elements are united ...
... popular type , but the division between courtly and popular is not hard and fast , and many of the great successes of Elizabethan - Jacobean pastoral lyric occur where courtly- classical and Renaissance - Italian elements are united ...
Pagina 145
... Popular Ballads ( Boston : Houghton Mifflin , 1884–98 ) , no . 112 . 4. C. R. Baskerville , The Elizabethan Jig ( Chicago : Chicago Univer- sity Press , 1929 ) , chap . 1 . 5. E. K. Chambers and F. Sidgwick , Early English Lyrics ...
... Popular Ballads ( Boston : Houghton Mifflin , 1884–98 ) , no . 112 . 4. C. R. Baskerville , The Elizabethan Jig ( Chicago : Chicago Univer- sity Press , 1929 ) , chap . 1 . 5. E. K. Chambers and F. Sidgwick , Early English Lyrics ...
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
allegory appears Arcadia ballad beauty begins Browne bucolic called century Chapter character classical close Colin collection common continued contrast conventional countryside course court critical dance Daphnis death delight described dialogue Drayton early echoes eclogue elegy Elizabethan England English fair farm feelings fields followed Garden Georgics Golden Age green happy human ideal idyll imitation innocence John joys kind lament land landscape later less literary living London lover Lycidas lyric Milton mind moral Muses nature nymphs Oxford Paradise passage pastoral poetry poem poet poor Pope popular praise Press published Queene reference Renaissance represents retirement rural rustic satire Seasons setting shepherd simple sing social song Spenser stanza sweet takes theme Theocritus Theocritus's Thomas tradition translation University verse Village Virgil whole Wordsworth writing written wrote