Periods of European Literature, Volume 4George Saintsbury William Blackwood, 1927 |
No interior do livro
Resultados 1-5 de 56
Página 5
... expression . Of influence , of preparation , of environment , there was more than enough , if such arguments hold good , to produce a second - rate Chaucer or a first - class Gower . The discipline of form , in the treatment of the ...
... expression . Of influence , of preparation , of environment , there was more than enough , if such arguments hold good , to produce a second - rate Chaucer or a first - class Gower . The discipline of form , in the treatment of the ...
Página 13
... expression of a personal incompetence , he had difficulties which did not vex Chaucer , and had some excuse when writing in a " comyn vulgare eke moost interupte . " 2 For the content of this transition period is not only the strife of ...
... expression of a personal incompetence , he had difficulties which did not vex Chaucer , and had some excuse when writing in a " comyn vulgare eke moost interupte . " 2 For the content of this transition period is not only the strife of ...
Página 16
... expression of relief from this terror , an expression the more intense because the medieval spirit was about to suffer change . To Lydgate and Occleve and to the fuller - blooded poets of the North , Death dogs the Muse as a villain in ...
... expression of relief from this terror , an expression the more intense because the medieval spirit was about to suffer change . To Lydgate and Occleve and to the fuller - blooded poets of the North , Death dogs the Muse as a villain in ...
Página 24
... expression of its time . Henceforth His allegorical all attempts to revive this chivalric dream position . betray the marks of affectation . The Faerie Queene and its circle are a recognised develop- ment , but they show very important ...
... expression of its time . Henceforth His allegorical all attempts to revive this chivalric dream position . betray the marks of affectation . The Faerie Queene and its circle are a recognised develop- ment , but they show very important ...
Página 30
... expression of his rebellion is in the verse form . The term ' Skeltonical ' has been handed down as signifying mere doggerel , or any medley of metre which is irreducible to academic rule . Yet no one would assert that it is the ...
... expression of his rebellion is in the verse form . The term ' Skeltonical ' has been handed down as signifying mere doggerel , or any medley of metre which is irreducible to academic rule . Yet no one would assert that it is the ...
Outras edições - Ver tudo
Palavras e frases frequentes
æsthetic Alain Chartier allegory artistic ballad Boiardo bourgeois Burgundian burlesque Chansons Chansons de geste chap character Charles Chaucer Chaucerian chivalric Christine de Pisan chronicle classical comedy Commines contemporary Court courtly critical cycle cynical Dames didactic drama Dunbar earlier early edition England English epic episodes examples expression extant fabliau farces fifteenth century formal fourteenth century France French Gavin Douglas Georges Chastellain German historical honour idea influence interest Italian Jean Jean de Meun King Kingis Quair later Latin less literary literature Lydgate Lyndsay lyrical matter medieval metrical Miracles modern mood Moralités Morality motif Mystery older original Paris Percy Folio perhaps period Petrarch pieces plays poem poetic poetry poets Politian political popular prose Pulci religious remarkable Renaissance romance satirical Scots Scottish sermons shows sixteenth Skelton songs Spanish spirit stanza story style Testament tion tradition translation variety vernacular verse Villon vols writers