The Poetry of Abraham Cowley |
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Page 75
... Cowley thought , to bewilder and entrap him . In order to prove his case rhetorically , Crashaw did not so much answer Cowley's argument on its own terms as introduce a new frame of reference altogether . He had to find a language which ...
... Cowley thought , to bewilder and entrap him . In order to prove his case rhetorically , Crashaw did not so much answer Cowley's argument on its own terms as introduce a new frame of reference altogether . He had to find a language which ...
Page 100
... Cowley's state- ment in the Preface that he had designed the poem in twelve books , ' not for the Tribes sake , but after the Pattern of our Master Virgil ' , ( P , 11 ) , symbolises this function . However , the problem with the ...
... Cowley's state- ment in the Preface that he had designed the poem in twelve books , ' not for the Tribes sake , but after the Pattern of our Master Virgil ' , ( P , 11 ) , symbolises this function . However , the problem with the ...
Page 156
... Cowley : sa vie , son oeuvre ( Paris , 1931 ) -Abraham Cowley's Reputation in England ( Paris , 1931 ) Madden , E. H. , Theories of Scientific Method : The Renaissance Through the Nineteenth Century ( Seattle , 1960 ) Maddison , C ...
... Cowley : sa vie , son oeuvre ( Paris , 1931 ) -Abraham Cowley's Reputation in England ( Paris , 1931 ) Madden , E. H. , Theories of Scientific Method : The Renaissance Through the Nineteenth Century ( Seattle , 1960 ) Maddison , C ...
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according appear argued argument authority become believe Book Cambridge ceremonial Civil common Complete concept concerned context course Cowley Cowley's Crashaw Critical Davideis defined described discourse divine Donne edition effect Elizabethan English English Studies epic Eschatology established example experience faith fire force frame gives hand Hobbes Hobbes's hope human ideas images Judges kind King knowledge language less lines literary Lives lover lyric manner means ment metaphor mind Mistress mode motion move Muse nature never odes Oxford person Philosophy Pindaric poem poetic poetry poets political position possible propositional reader reason reference relation rhetoric ritual Samuel Science seems sense speak stanza statement structure Studies style thee things Thou thought traditional true truth verse volumes writing written wrote