Imperfect Apprehensions: Essays in English Literature in Honour of G.A. WilkesGeoffrey Little Challis Press, 1996 - 284 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 31
Page 11
... traditions are neatly pared away from a refined neoclassical genre . In this paper , I want to examine the possibility ... tradition involving the historical transmission of ' symbolic forms and signifying practices'.10 One libel subtly ...
... traditions are neatly pared away from a refined neoclassical genre . In this paper , I want to examine the possibility ... tradition involving the historical transmission of ' symbolic forms and signifying practices'.10 One libel subtly ...
Page 14
... tradition , it is perhaps worth considering the extent to which the poets ' commitment to the satyr enabled them to ... traditions . When Dryden looked for the origins of Roman satire , he imagined ' a company of clowns on holyday ...
... tradition , it is perhaps worth considering the extent to which the poets ' commitment to the satyr enabled them to ... traditions . When Dryden looked for the origins of Roman satire , he imagined ' a company of clowns on holyday ...
Page 76
... tradition back to its origins in moral comedy , the tradition it has emphasized ever since . It is not often recognised that the role of Volpone as a figure of Avarice is in fact among the oldest and most powerful on the English stage ...
... tradition back to its origins in moral comedy , the tradition it has emphasized ever since . It is not often recognised that the role of Volpone as a figure of Avarice is in fact among the oldest and most powerful on the English stage ...
Contents
Acknowledgements iii | 11 |
Narcissus Called to Account | 18 |
Old Age | 44 |
Copyright | |
8 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
appears associated Australian Barbauld beauty become beginning Book called century claims close Coleridge continues Corinne Criticism culture death detail early edition Eliot England English evidence example eyes face fact figure George give hand human Imagination interest Italian Italy John Jonson Keats Keats's kind King knowledge language later Lear letter libels light lines literary Literature live London look Lost Maggie meaning mind moral narrative nature never Notes novel opening Oxford Paradise play poem poet poetry political popular present published reading reference relation rhetoric Rogers role romantic Romeo satire scene seems sense Shakespeare Silas social sonnet sources stage story Studies suggests Swift Sydney things thought tradition trees triumph truth turns University Verona verse voice Volpone woman women writing young youth