A Guide to English Literature, Volumen2Boris Ford Penguin Books, 1954 |
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Página 17
... poetry . The best prepara- tion for reading the poetry of Chaucer and his contemporaries is experience in reading poetry . The acquisition of background is no compensation for the kind of illiteracy that makes little of poetry or tries ...
... poetry . The best prepara- tion for reading the poetry of Chaucer and his contemporaries is experience in reading poetry . The acquisition of background is no compensation for the kind of illiteracy that makes little of poetry or tries ...
Página 18
... poetry to English poetry for the first time . But he was a still more remarkable innovator than that might suggest . He developed the art of literature itself beyond any- thing to be found in French or Italian or any other medieval ...
... poetry to English poetry for the first time . But he was a still more remarkable innovator than that might suggest . He developed the art of literature itself beyond any- thing to be found in French or Italian or any other medieval ...
Página 20
... poetry gained immensely in th vividness and variety of its imagery and its idioms from being in th spoken language of the medieval English people . But the language o Chaucer's poetry is unmistakably that English further shaped ...
... poetry gained immensely in th vividness and variety of its imagery and its idioms from being in th spoken language of the medieval English people . But the language o Chaucer's poetry is unmistakably that English further shaped ...
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allegory alliterative appon bifore Breton lays Canterbury Tales carols Chapel Chaucer church courtly courtly love Cycle dede Degare dere deth doun dramatic Dunbar eche Elizabethan England English literature erthe Everyman Faerie Queene fourteenth century FOURTH SOLDIER freke gode Grene Knight grete hade hathel hede heghe hert heven honde human king kyng lady Langland lede leve literary loke londe London lorde mete Middle Ages Middle English mony moral Morality Play myght never noght Orfeo Piers Plowman play poem poet poetry prose quath quoth reader religious riche romances sayde SECOND SHEPHERD SECOND SOLDIER segge seyd shal shulde Sir Gawayne Sir Orfeo sithen sone sothe Spenser tale thaire Thanne thay thee Thenne ther THIRD SHEPHERD THIRD SOLDIER thoght thou thre thurgh tradition Troilus and Criseyde tyme verse wele whan wighe wolde words Wyatt Wynnere