71) §9. His Versification. VI. Lesser Verse Writers. Vol. 9. From Steele and
Addison to Pope and Swift. The Cambridge History of English and American
Literature: An Encyclopedia in Eighteen Volumes. 1907–21 ...fact that, though Prior wrote, not only his Henry and Emma and not a little of his other amorous poetry, but, also, his Solomon, which he esteemed his masterpiece,... 72) §15. "The Court of Love". VIII. The English Chaucerians. Vol. 2. The End of
the Middle Ages. The Cambridge History of English and American Literature:
An Encyclopedia in Eighteen Volumes. 1907–21 ...the rarities of the place. Various allegorical personages and scenes pass before him: the most famous and beautiful of which is the picture of those who have wilfully... 73) Welsh literature. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001 ...and partly transformed by numerous Welsh revisions. 3Early medieval prose includes The History of the Kings of Britain and romances and stories of the Holy Grail,... 74) §1. William Chamberlayne; "Pharonnida". IV. Lesser Caroline Poets. Vol. 7.
Cavalier and Puritan. The Cambridge History of English and American
Literature: An Encyclopedia in Eighteen Volumes. 1907–21 ...go; ancestors of some of the most characteristic, and not the least charming, features of the poetry of the nineteenththese curious persons have woven themselves... 75) §9. Sonnets. IV. Keats. Vol. 12. The Romantic Revival. The Cambridge
History of English and American Literature: An Encyclopedia in Eighteen
Volumes. 1907–21 ...as In me thou see st. One or two, as the charming June s sea, copy the Elizabethan manner too cleverly to be very like Keats, nor are his mind and passion at all... 76) §3. Bailey s "Festus". 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 ...of political-theosophical studentry, and once creates a really poetical situation (which the author, unable, to deal with it even at first, spoilt further in the... 77) §16. Edward Benlowes. IV. Lesser Caroline Poets. Vol. 7. Cavalier and
Puritan. The Cambridge History of English and American Literature: An
Encyclopedia in Eighteen Volumes. 1907–21 ...his Bubb, with the note A gentleman of Oxford who patronised all bad poets of that reign. He left these lines out, but, in the Dunciad (III, 21), he returned to the... 78) §8. Dryden and Pope in New England. IX. The Beginnings of Verse,
1610–1808. Vol. 15. Colonial and Revolutionary Literature; Early National
Literature, Part I. The Cambridge History of English and American
Literature: An Encyclopedia in Eighteen Volumes. 1907–21 ...from England in 1699, brought with him both Blackmore and Waller. This decisive event in the history of American verse marked the beginning of a new era, that of... 79) §10. Keats. VII. The Prosody of the Nineteenth Century. Vol. 13. The
Victorian Age, Part One. The Cambridge History of English and American
Literature: An Encyclopedia in Eighteen Volumes. 1907–21 ...was that there is hardly a complete couplet enclosing a complete idea throughout the book. Nearly ten years later, when all the greatest poetry in varied form of... 80) §15. Force of his invective. XVII. Political Literature. Vol. 10. The Age
of Johnson. The Cambridge History of English and American Literature: An
Encyclopedia in Eighteen Volumes. 1907–21 ...he cannot be said himself to rise superior to eighteenth-century conventions. His incessant personifications, Gay Description, Dull Propriety, are, in the end, wearisome;... |