Older Masters: Essays and Reflections on English and American LiteratureDonald Davie's major essays on British and American writers from Chaucer to Browning. |
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Page 69
Each isolate man ' - that certainly gives the quality of Taylor's religion . All one needs to add is that , while it certainly isolated the believer from his human fellows , it did not isolate him from - on the contrary , it bound him ...
Each isolate man ' - that certainly gives the quality of Taylor's religion . All one needs to add is that , while it certainly isolated the believer from his human fellows , it did not isolate him from - on the contrary , it bound him ...
Page 149
This is certainly excessive . For one thing , Pope held so far as he could by the Renaissance principle of decorum , and adjusted his style according as he essayed each of the traditional poetic kinds , even to the desperate expedient ...
This is certainly excessive . For one thing , Pope held so far as he could by the Renaissance principle of decorum , and adjusted his style according as he essayed each of the traditional poetic kinds , even to the desperate expedient ...
Page 311
( Wordsworth is a great poet , however ; though neither Winters nor Pound , Yeats nor Eliot , seems to have thought so , Basil Bunting certainly does . And Bunting , though he never writes in metre as I like to do , is nevertheless for ...
( Wordsworth is a great poet , however ; though neither Winters nor Pound , Yeats nor Eliot , seems to have thought so , Basil Bunting certainly does . And Bunting , though he never writes in metre as I like to do , is nevertheless for ...
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Contents
Chaucer and One Idea of Englishness 1972 | 7 |
A Reading of The Oceans Love to Cynthia 1960 | 13 |
Shakespeare and the Practising Poet Today 1976 | 31 |
Copyright | |
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Adams admired appears argument believe Berkeley better body called century certainly comes contrary course criticism death dialogue diction distinction Dryden effect eighteenth eighteenth-century England English essay example experience expression fact feel figure follows force give hand human idea imagination important instance interest John Johnson language later laws learned least Ledyard less lines literary literature lived London look matter means metaphor mind nature never object once passage perhaps period person philosopher poem poet poetic poetry political Pope possible present principle prose question reader reason rhetoric seems seen sense Shakespeare Smart society sort speak spirit stand stanza style surely taken Taylor things thought tion tradition true turn verse whole Wordsworth writing wrote