Unisa English Studies, Volumele 27-29Department of English, University of South Africa, 1989 |
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Pagina 12
... symbolism , leaving aside , for the most part , the reader's response to the poem's structure . These readers , however ... symbol as something which ' partakes of the Reality it renders intelligible'.2 The implication in this for the ...
... symbolism , leaving aside , for the most part , the reader's response to the poem's structure . These readers , however ... symbol as something which ' partakes of the Reality it renders intelligible'.2 The implication in this for the ...
Pagina 14
... symbol . A number of scholars have read the symbol ( and therefore the poem ) as descriptive . Barbara Harman , for instance , has suggested that the words ' we are but flowers that glide ' ( 1. 44 ) imply unnatural flowers ( 1982 : 168 ) ...
... symbol . A number of scholars have read the symbol ( and therefore the poem ) as descriptive . Barbara Harman , for instance , has suggested that the words ' we are but flowers that glide ' ( 1. 44 ) imply unnatural flowers ( 1982 : 168 ) ...
Pagina 18
... symbol of the poem , the cross , has changed from its initial one . The uncertainty surrounding their various interp- retative frameworks is resolved by their accept- ance of the symbol and of Christ's words as something having an a ...
... symbol of the poem , the cross , has changed from its initial one . The uncertainty surrounding their various interp- retative frameworks is resolved by their accept- ance of the symbol and of Christ's words as something having an a ...
Cuprins
Reviews | 35 |
Review Notes | 69 |
Journal of the Department | |
Drept de autor | |
28 alte secțiuni nu sunt arătate
Alte ediții - Afișează-le pe toate
Unisa English Studies, Volumele 8-9 University of South Africa. Department of English Vizualizare fragmente - 1970 |
Unisa English Studies, Volumul 15 University of South Africa. Department of English Vizualizare fragmente - 1977 |
Termeni și expresii frecvente
aesthetic anthology barbarians Beatrice Beowulf Byron Caliban Cenci century chapter character child Coleridge's collection concern contemporary context critical cultural Cummings Cummings's dramatic lyric dramatic monologue E. E. Cummings edition Eliot English English Studies Enormous Room essay experience fact Fay Weldon feminist Ferté fiction genre human imagination Introduction John King kynde La Ferté language letter lines literary London Magistrate means medieval ment metaphor moral mother myth Napoleon narrative narrator nature novel Oscar Wilde Oxford Paperback play poem poet poet's poetic poetry political Précigné present prison Prospero published reader reading reality reference Review seems sense Shakespeare Shelley social South African literature speaker stanza story suggests symbol T. S. Eliot Theatre theory things thought tion tradition Trevisa Unisa University of South University Press verse voice volume W. H. Davies Wilde Wilde's women words Wordsworth writing