The Fizz Inside: Critical Essays of a Lighter KindUniversity of Waterloo Press, 1980 - 389 pagini |
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Pagina 132
... fact Milton had so used the word ( though Keats's dictionaries did not record the fact ) when in Paradise Lost he wrote , " the buxom Air , imbalm'd / With odours " ( 2.842-43 ) . And this use of a root meaning would accord with what ...
... fact Milton had so used the word ( though Keats's dictionaries did not record the fact ) when in Paradise Lost he wrote , " the buxom Air , imbalm'd / With odours " ( 2.842-43 ) . And this use of a root meaning would accord with what ...
Pagina 142
... fact is more under- standable . With regard to Prince Hal , for instance , the reader who is not aware of literary conventions and the way they work may well assume that since there was an historical person of that name , the character ...
... fact is more under- standable . With regard to Prince Hal , for instance , the reader who is not aware of literary conventions and the way they work may well assume that since there was an historical person of that name , the character ...
Pagina 269
... fact that he was the one doing the talking helped him . So did the fact that he obviously knew more about the question at hand than anyone in the audience . And most important for holding the audience was the fact that he was ...
... fact that he was the one doing the talking helped him . So did the fact that he obviously knew more about the question at hand than anyone in the audience . And most important for holding the audience was the fact that he was ...
Cuprins
His Highness Dog at Kew | 3 |
The Bickerstaff Caper | 11 |
Logic in Catch22 3335 | 27 |
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A. P. Herbert allusions appear battle Bickerstaff British Brooke Brooke's called Canadian Cathleen Nesbitt characters Cockings comic course Crabbe dead death device Dryden effect England English expression eyes fact feel fictional Geoffrey Keynes George George Crabbe Grantchester Greek Haddock heart heroic tragedy honour Houyhnhnms human idyllic Isaac Bickerstaff Jacques Raverat John Dryden John Keats Keats kind laughter Letters likewise literary live London lovers Lycidas McGee meaning mind mouth nature orators original audience Oxford paragraph parallel Partridge Partridge's passage peace person phrase play poem poet Poetical poetry Pope present presumably Quebec question quoted reader reason reference Roman Rupert Rupert Brooke satire says scene seen sentence Sir John soldiers sonnet soul speaker speech spiritual stanza Swift tempter Tennyson's things Thomas D'Arcy McGee thought tion translation turn Univ Utopia verse Walden Wenlock Edge whole Wolfe Wolfe's words writing Yossarian