The Divine ScienceColumbia University Press, 1940 - 292 Seiten Looks at English poetry from the 17th century, when its character changed radically. Examines the changes through the works of Ben Jonson, William Browne, George Wither, John Milton, and John Donne, among others. |
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Seite 32
... Jonson's evaluation of stanzas . Rime was a bane if it dominated the poet , but there was a certain exalta- tion in conquering this refractory element and adding its ... Jonson rime was never an essential and not always 32 BEN JONSON.
... Jonson's evaluation of stanzas . Rime was a bane if it dominated the poet , but there was a certain exalta- tion in conquering this refractory element and adding its ... Jonson rime was never an essential and not always 32 BEN JONSON.
Seite 35
... Jonson was not by any means the Shakespearean mirror held to the face of nature and reflecting various men and moods in all their complexity . The mirror of Jonson was a highly selective one that concentrated its beams on peculiarities ...
... Jonson was not by any means the Shakespearean mirror held to the face of nature and reflecting various men and moods in all their complexity . The mirror of Jonson was a highly selective one that concentrated its beams on peculiarities ...
Seite 38
... Jonson applies the force of classical comedy to further an almost medieval morality . But moral earnestness was not a purely medieval characteristic . Jonson as a pro- ponent of Renaissance poetic theory had early acknowledged as the ...
... Jonson applies the force of classical comedy to further an almost medieval morality . But moral earnestness was not a purely medieval characteristic . Jonson as a pro- ponent of Renaissance poetic theory had early acknowledged as the ...
Inhalt
BEN JONSON | 16 |
MICHAEL DRAYTON | 47 |
WILLIAM BROWNE | 80 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Abraham Cowley artistic audience beauty Ben Jonson Britannia's Pastorals Browne Carew century classical Columbia Columbia ed comedy Complete Plays concept Cowley's Crashaw critics Davenant Defensio delight desire divine Donne doth Dramatic Drayton early English epic Epistles Essays fame Fletcher gift Giles Giles Fletcher glory Gondibert hath Herbert heroic Herrick Ibid idea imitation immortality inspiration Jonson language lbid lofty lyric Marvell Masque Metaphysical Poets Milton Mistress Muse nature noble numbers Odes Paradise Paradise Lost Paradise Regain'd passion perfect Phineas Phineas Fletcher Pindar Plays and Sundry Poems of Abraham Poesie poet's Poetaster poetic theory Poly-Olbion praise preface prose purpose reader Reason of Church-government religious poetry Renaissance Richard Crashaw rime satire Satyre secular Seventeenth seventeenth-century shepherd sing Smectymnuus song sonnet Spenser spirit stanza style subject matter sweet teach thee theme theory of poetry things thou thought tion translation truth type of poetry Vergil virtue Whalley Wither worthy writing