Dialogues with Convention: Readings in Renaissance PoetryHarvester Wheatsheaf, 1989 - 204 頁 |
搜尋書籍內容
第 1 到 3 筆結果,共 42 筆
第 14 頁
... reader , would want to turn this whole formulation on its head . The throng of readers are not vampires but the necessary ' fit audience ' ; far from being unable , the author can only write when someone is watching him , nor could he ...
... reader , would want to turn this whole formulation on its head . The throng of readers are not vampires but the necessary ' fit audience ' ; far from being unable , the author can only write when someone is watching him , nor could he ...
第 25 頁
... reader : ' each reader brings his or her preconceptions , aesthetic and socio - cultural , to bear on the poems ' ; and the most important readers and audiences of the poems are ' the ones unnamed ' , that is , their contemporary courtly ...
... reader : ' each reader brings his or her preconceptions , aesthetic and socio - cultural , to bear on the poems ' ; and the most important readers and audiences of the poems are ' the ones unnamed ' , that is , their contemporary courtly ...
第 37 頁
... reader ( though the provided experience of ' delight ' will help get us there ) : and it also depends , crucially , on the reader's ability to interpret and under- stand what the poet is offering . The same premise that requires the ...
... reader ( though the provided experience of ' delight ' will help get us there ) : and it also depends , crucially , on the reader's ability to interpret and under- stand what the poet is offering . The same premise that requires the ...
其他版本 - 查看全部
常見字詞
action actually Adam and Eve Adam's allegorical appears artistic asserts Astrophil and Stella Book Christian Christopher Ricks Comus conceit conventions course critical cross crucial Defence discourse divine Donne's dramatic earth elegy English epic epic simile eternity Eve's Faerie Queene Fall fiction field figures foreknowledge genres God's Haemony heart Heaven Helen Gardner heroic Holy Sonnet human imaginative imitation implied John Donne John Milton landscape lines literary logical London lover masque meaning merely metaphor mind moral narrative nature offers Ovid Ovid's Ovidian Oxford Paradise Lost paradox pastoral Penelope Devereux Penseroso perhaps Petrarchan Platonic poem poet poet's poetic poetry possible question reader Renaissance response rhetorical Satan seems sense sequence Sidney Sidney's simile Sonnet 20 Sonnet 45 sort spelling Spenser story suggest thee things thir thou thought tion University Press verbal verses William Empson words writing