Alexander Pope, 第 41 卷Twayne, 1967 - 180 頁 |
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第 1 到 3 筆結果,共 24 筆
第 59 頁
... action and allows him to look upon the event as part of the total movement of the poem : its language is not the reader's spoken language , and this fact sets the action apart , even though his emotions are at times involved in it ...
... action and allows him to look upon the event as part of the total movement of the poem : its language is not the reader's spoken language , and this fact sets the action apart , even though his emotions are at times involved in it ...
第 101 頁
... action " forms the transition to the next step in the argument : action reveals the true man . Pope declares this tru- ism to be a false assumption because action is more often dictated by emotion than reason . But granting the ...
... action " forms the transition to the next step in the argument : action reveals the true man . Pope declares this tru- ism to be a false assumption because action is more often dictated by emotion than reason . But granting the ...
第 151 頁
... action fulfills two functions : it gives a narrative progression and thus an external structure to the poem , and it ... action on the part of a protagonist , might find the " Dunciad " static . In one of the prefaces , " Martinus ...
... action fulfills two functions : it gives a narrative progression and thus an external structure to the poem , and it ... action on the part of a protagonist , might find the " Dunciad " static . In one of the prefaces , " Martinus ...
常見字詞
action Addison Alexander Pope allusion appeared Arbuthnot attack attempts Bathurst Beauty becomes Book cause character Christian concerned continue couplet created Criticism discussion divine Dunciad early edition English epic Epistle Essay Ethic evil expressed fact fall final force four George gives Homer Horace human ideas Iliad illustrate Imitations John kind language later Laws learned letter lines literary live Lord Lost man's March mean metaphor mind moral nature original pastoral poem poet poetic poetry political Pope Pope's portrait praise present Press pride principle Professor publication published reader reason relation rhetoric rules satire seems sense sketch social society success taste theme things tion tone tradition translation true truth turn University values verse vice virtue whole Windsor Forest writing written