Acts of Knowledge: Pope's Later Poems |
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Page 42
... poetic identity they helped to constitute and , therefore , of the poet's relationship to the world . Pope's effort to discover connections or to discover a mode of knowledge hospitable to the discovery of connections - between the poet ...
... poetic identity they helped to constitute and , therefore , of the poet's relationship to the world . Pope's effort to discover connections or to discover a mode of knowledge hospitable to the discovery of connections - between the poet ...
Page 112
... poet's relationship to the world . In the satires , where the poet is often engaged in dialogue with an adversary , the poem is itself a confrontation , dramatizing an immediate engagement of the world in an act of speech . It is this ...
... poet's relationship to the world . In the satires , where the poet is often engaged in dialogue with an adversary , the poem is itself a confrontation , dramatizing an immediate engagement of the world in an act of speech . It is this ...
Page 200
... poetic modes , and the aspects of the poet's con- sciousness they articulate , are fully united in only a few of Pope's poems . Epistle II.i. ( “ To Augustus " ) offers a limited version of such a union insofar as Pope casts the ...
... poetic modes , and the aspects of the poet's con- sciousness they articulate , are fully united in only a few of Pope's poems . Epistle II.i. ( “ To Augustus " ) offers a limited version of such a union insofar as Pope casts the ...
Contents
Preface | 9 |
Human Knowledge and Poetic Structure | 37 |
The Epistolary Pattern | 108 |
Copyright | |
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acknowledge act of knowledge Alexander Pope ambiguity apocalyptic apocalyptic vision Arbuthnot Atossa Augustan Balaam Bathurst begins Bethel Blake Garden Burlington character Cobham complex Corr corruption criticism dialogue dramatic Dryden's Dunciad emphasis ends epic Epilogue Epistle II.ii Epistle to Dr Essay ev'ry example experience extremes fables final Fool Friend genuine genuine opposites Heav'n heroic Horace's Horatian human I.vi identity Imitations of Horace impulses kind Lady lines literary Lord Bathurst Lord Bolingbroke Maynard Mack means merely mind mode moral movement myth nature Northrop Frye opposite passage pattern Persons perspective poem poem's poet poetic Pope's poetry Pope's satire portrait Pow'r qualified reality relationship resistance retirement Reuben Brower role Ruling Passion Satire II.i satires and epistles satirist schematic knowledge self-knowledge sense simply skepticism speaking Sporus stance strives structure substantial knowledge Swift T. R. Edwards tale theodicean things Timon's tragic truth University Press verse virtue visionary Windsor Forest write