In Defense of Reading: A Reader's Approach to Literary CriticismReuben Arthur Brower, Richard Poirier |
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Page 117
... Alonso , his experience has a dramatic significance which in the total picture is second only to Prospero's . The ... Alonso's grief . For over a hundred lines he says nothing but " Prithee , peace , " until at last , goaded by Antonio's ...
... Alonso , his experience has a dramatic significance which in the total picture is second only to Prospero's . The ... Alonso's grief . For over a hundred lines he says nothing but " Prithee , peace , " until at last , goaded by Antonio's ...
Page 118
... Alonso from Prospero's narrative . The response , though , begins at once to be qualified . To Se- bastian's incredibly tasteless accusation " The fault's your own " ( 1. 131 ) , Alonso replies sharply and immediately , " So is the dear ...
... Alonso from Prospero's narrative . The response , though , begins at once to be qualified . To Se- bastian's incredibly tasteless accusation " The fault's your own " ( 1. 131 ) , Alonso replies sharply and immediately , " So is the dear ...
Page 119
... Alonso un- derstands it . ( No such explanation , we recall , was necessary for Ferdinand . ) From then on , the speech is not only complex and ma- jestic verse but very straight talk indeed : Ariel has to remind Alonso of what he has ...
... Alonso un- derstands it . ( No such explanation , we recall , was necessary for Ferdinand . ) From then on , the speech is not only complex and ma- jestic verse but very straight talk indeed : Ariel has to remind Alonso of what he has ...
Contents
Fiction and History | 11 |
Lyric and Narrative Poetry | 22 |
Frosts Poetry of Dialogue | 38 |
Copyright | |
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action Adam's Alonso Arnold Augustan aware beauty become blind Caliban character Coole Park Cordelia Coriolanus course critics death dialogues dramatic Emma essay experience express eyes feel final Frank Churchill Frost's Gloucester Gloucester's historical Huck Huck's Huckleberry Finn human imagination interpretation Jane Austen Katherine kind King King Lear L. C. Knights Lady Gregory landscape Lear Lear's lines literary literature look Mark Twain masque means metaphor mind Miranda moral narrative voice narrator nature never night novel Paradise Lost Parkman particular passage pastoral play poem poet poet's poetry Pope Pope's Prospero reader reading reality reveal Salle Salle's Satan satires scene scholar Scholar Gipsy seems sense Shakespeare sight pattern simply social society solitude soul speak speaker speech stanza Stevens style suffering suggests Swift tell thee things thou tion Tom Sawyer tone truth vision Wolsey words Wordsworth's Yeats Yeats's