An Introduction to LiteratureThis collection is designed to introduce college students to literature. Each volume focuses on a specific area, wherein the characteristics, conventions, and special effects of each kind of writing are set out, the critical terms are introduced, and each editor brings their viewpoint to the task. The editors of this book see literature as an unending source of delight, and propose analysis to the student not as an end in itself, but as a means of widening the range of comprehension, the deepening of enjoyment for literature as more fully comprehended. Each book features introductions that explore the type of literature addressed, brief author biographies, and a series of questions designed to allow students to exercise their critical and analytical faculties. |
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Страница 957
Find out some uncouth cell Where brooding Darkness spreads his jealous wings
And the night - raven sings ; There ... two sister Graces more To ivy - crownéd
Bacchus bore ; Or whether ( as some sager sing ) The frolic wind that breathes
the ...
Find out some uncouth cell Where brooding Darkness spreads his jealous wings
And the night - raven sings ; There ... two sister Graces more To ivy - crownéd
Bacchus bore ; Or whether ( as some sager sing ) The frolic wind that breathes
the ...
Страница 965
And now I sing : Any food , . . . With a thought I took for Maudlin , And a cruse of
cockle pottage , With a thing thus tall , sky bless you all , I befell into this dotage . I
slept not since the Conquest , Till then I never wakèd , Till the rougish boy of love
...
And now I sing : Any food , . . . With a thought I took for Maudlin , And a cruse of
cockle pottage , With a thing thus tall , sky bless you all , I befell into this dotage . I
slept not since the Conquest , Till then I never wakèd , Till the rougish boy of love
...
Страница 978
The sedge is wither'd from the lake , And no birds sing . " O what can ail thee ,
knight - at - arms , So haggard and so woe - begone ? The squirrels granary is
full , And the harvest's done . “ I see a lily on thy brow With anguish moist and
fever ...
The sedge is wither'd from the lake , And no birds sing . " O what can ail thee ,
knight - at - arms , So haggard and so woe - begone ? The squirrels granary is
full , And the harvest's done . “ I see a lily on thy brow With anguish moist and
fever ...
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Съдържание
INTRODUCTORY NOTE | 663 |
CHAPTER TWO A BURBLE | 678 |
FOLK BALLADS | 685 |
Авторско право | |
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ballad beauty become begins bird breath called certainly clear close comes dark dead death diction discussion dream effect English example eyes face fact fair fall fear feel final flowers foot force Frost hand head hear heard heart heaven images John kind language leave light live look meaning metaphor metrics mind moon motion move nature never night Note once passage passed pause permission phrase play poem poet poetic poetry possible present QUESTIONS reader reason rest rhyme rose round seems sense ship simply sing single sleep sort soul sound speak stand stanza statement stressed suggestion sweet syllables symbol taken tell tends thee thing thou thought tone true turn voice wind writing young