Essays in English Literature from the Renaissance to the Victorian AgeUniversity of Toronto Press, 1964 - 339 pages |
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Page 29
... reader is stimulated by it , how much more shocked would be the reader for whom the poet wrote , for whom the prime and unmistakable reference of Cynthia must be none other than the Queen - goddess of England at present reigning . Let ...
... reader is stimulated by it , how much more shocked would be the reader for whom the poet wrote , for whom the prime and unmistakable reference of Cynthia must be none other than the Queen - goddess of England at present reigning . Let ...
Page 145
... reader who comes to the poem with Broadbent's ambivalent psychological view of its author , the repudiation of the traditional conception of epic heroism in the prologue to Book IX itself shares " a flickering remote beauty with ...
... reader who comes to the poem with Broadbent's ambivalent psychological view of its author , the repudiation of the traditional conception of epic heroism in the prologue to Book IX itself shares " a flickering remote beauty with ...
Page 243
... reader may recognize without knowing that here we have still a large proportion of the earliest poem . It is odd , however , that the farewell to Coleridge which was its formal conclusion still remains at the end of Book II . Many readers ...
... reader may recognize without knowing that here we have still a large proportion of the earliest poem . It is odd , however , that the farewell to Coleridge which was its formal conclusion still remains at the end of Book II . Many readers ...
Contents
INTRODUCTION | 3 |
SPENSERS MUTABILITIE | 26 |
NOTES ON THE ORDERED | 43 |
Copyright | |
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Adam Adam's Bedford Bentham Browne C. S. Lewis called Chain Chamonix Christ Christian liberty Church Coleridge Columbia Edition course critical death divine doctrine Donne Donne's E. M. W. Tillyard early edition English Epistle Essay Faerie Queene faith father friends friendship God's heaven Hooker human idea imagination implied James Mill John Donne John Mill Jonson King Lady later letter living London Lord Michael Mill's Milton mind modern moral Mutabilitie nature never Newman Northrop Frye Oxford Paradise Lost passage pattern perhaps phrase poem poet poet's poetry political Pope prelapsarian Puritanism reader reason reform relation religious renovation response Review Ruskin Samson Samson Agonistes Satan says seems sense significant social society Sophroniscus Spenser spiritual authority theme theory things thought tion Toronto tradition truth University University of Toronto virtue volume Walton Woodhouse Woodhouse's Wordsworth writing