61) §3. "The House of Life". V. The Rossettis, William Morris, Swinburne, and
Others. Vol. 13. The Victorian Age, Part One. The Cambridge History of
English and American Literature: An Encyclopedia in Eighteen Volumes.
1907–21 ...diction to all his work; nor could any English sonneteer whose theme was the passion of love be free from some debt to Shakespeare and the Elizabethans generally.... 62) §40. T. E. Brown. VI. Lesser Poets of the Middle and Later Nineteenth
Century. Vol. 13. The Victorian Age, Part One. The Cambridge History of
English and American Literature: An Encyclopedia in Eighteen Volumes.
1907–21 ...free from respect of persons, must have seen that it wanted the indefinable that! In his narrative poems, the following now of Tennyson now of Browning is so unmistakable... 63) §10. Political verses. XVII. Later Transition English. Vol. 1. From the
Beginnings to the Cycles of Romance. The Cambridge History of English and
American Literature: An Encyclopedia in Eighteen Volumes. 1907–21 ...strangely different from others that have zigzagged hither. 16 Of Middle English political verses, the earliest preserved are, probably, those on the battle of Lewes,... 64) §4. His achievements. X. George Gascoigne. Vol. 3. Renascence and
Reformation. The Cambridge History of English and American Literature: An
Encyclopedia in Eighteen Volumes. 1907–21 ...the regular beat of his verse often giving the effect of water coming out of a bottle. His long poems, whether in blank verse or rimed measures, soon become monotonous... 65) X. Anglo-Indian Literature: Bibliography. Vol. 14. The Victorian Age, Part
Two. The Cambridge History of English and American Literature: An
Encyclopedia in Eighteen Volumes. 1907–21 ...a new edition of the Indian Song of Songs, Two Books from the Mahâbhârata, and other Oriental Poems. 1881. Arnold, Sir E. Pearls of the Faith: or Islam s Rosary;... 66) §3. The Influence of Chaucer. X. The Scottish Chaucerians. Vol. 2. The End
of the Middle Ages. The Cambridge History of English and American
Literature: An Encyclopedia in Eighteen Volumes. 1907–21 ...appear to the careful reader, is shown in a remarkable way in the reference at the close to the poems of Gower and Chaucer. This means more than the customary homage... 67) American literature. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001 ...who wrote dark, brooding lines on humankind in the universe; Edgar Lee Masters, who used free verse for realistic biographies in A Spoon River Anthology (1915); his... 68) §8. Dyer s "Grongar Hill". VII. Young, Collins and Lesser Poets of the Age
of Johnson. Vol. 10. The Age of Johnson. The Cambridge History of English
and American Literature: An Encyclopedia in Eighteen Volumes. 1907–21 ...surprisingly unsuccessful replica, of Grongar Hill. But Grongar Hill itself is one of those poems which occupy a place of their own, humble though it may be, as compared... 69) §2. French influences. XII. The Elizabethan Sonnet. Vol. 3. Renascence and
Reformation. The Cambridge History of English and American Literature: An
Encyclopedia in Eighteen Volumes. 1907–21 ...poems were reprinted, twenty-two years later, in an acknowledged collection of Spenser s minor verse, called Complaints, for the whole of which the poet s responsibility... 70) §3. Variations of the Iambic Line. IX. The Prosody of the Seventeenth
Century. Vol. 8. The Age of Dryden. The Cambridge History of English and
American Literature: An Encyclopedia in Eighteen Volumes. 1907–21 ...famous Hamlet soliloquies; and by following up this pair with anothersay, one of Turbervile s poems and a song from Much Ado about Nothing, As You Like It, or The... |