A Guide to English Literature, Volumen2Boris Ford Penguin Books, 1954 |
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Página 111
... popular preacher , and it completely detaches and objectifies even the sermon as comic dramatic art . After a succession of popular ensamples from the Bible , the Pardoner in his sermon dwells on the original instance of ' glotonye ...
... popular preacher , and it completely detaches and objectifies even the sermon as comic dramatic art . After a succession of popular ensamples from the Bible , the Pardoner in his sermon dwells on the original instance of ' glotonye ...
Página 161
... popular , flourished only sporadically in England in the thirteenth and early fourteenth centuries , from the lack of an audience interested in the refinements of amour courtois . Chaucer was the first poet to have such an audience ...
... popular , flourished only sporadically in England in the thirteenth and early fourteenth centuries , from the lack of an audience interested in the refinements of amour courtois . Chaucer was the first poet to have such an audience ...
Página 213
... popular song motives ( August ) , a ' lofty ' style which already anticipates The Faerie Queene ( Piers again in October ) , the elegiac pessimism of November , and the purely decorative use of natural motives in December . The variety ...
... popular song motives ( August ) , a ' lofty ' style which already anticipates The Faerie Queene ( Piers again in October ) , the elegiac pessimism of November , and the purely decorative use of natural motives in December . The variety ...
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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