British Writers: Retrospective supplement, Volume 2Jay Parini Twenty-two of the most studied and most popular writers in British literature are reexamined in this second retrospective supplement to the British Writers Series. Authors covered include Jane Austen, Chaucer, Dickens, T. S. Eliot, Tom Stoppard, Oscar Wilde and others. |
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Page 123
... seems to indulge in self - interrogation throughout . When he says " Let us go and make our visit " he seems to be talking only to himself , encouraging himself to go and visit some woman , to whom he may wish to pose " the overwhelm ...
... seems to indulge in self - interrogation throughout . When he says " Let us go and make our visit " he seems to be talking only to himself , encouraging himself to go and visit some woman , to whom he may wish to pose " the overwhelm ...
Page 240
... seems to have been well - disposed towards Malory is not known for certain , although the labyrinthine struggles for local power and influence between the various noble " affinities " ( groups of men tied to aristocratic patrons to ...
... seems to have been well - disposed towards Malory is not known for certain , although the labyrinthine struggles for local power and influence between the various noble " affinities " ( groups of men tied to aristocratic patrons to ...
Page 301
... seems a text perhaps intended for personal devotion . It provides the thematic key to this collection of poems , all of which deal with literal and allegori- cal images of Hell and the Harrowing of Hell , from damnation to redemption ...
... seems a text perhaps intended for personal devotion . It provides the thematic key to this collection of poems , all of which deal with literal and allegori- cal images of Hell and the Harrowing of Hell , from damnation to redemption ...
Contents
Contents | xiii |
List of Contributors | lxix |
ROBERT BROWNING Julie Hearn | 17 |
Copyright | |
21 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
Andrew Marvell Arcadia Arthur becomes begins born Browning Browning's Cambridge century characters Chaucer Christ Christian Church Coleridge Coleridge's comedy Conrad Critical D. H. Lawrence death Donne Donne's dramatic E. M. Forster edition Eliot Elizabeth England Essays father fiction Forster George Herbert Gerard Manley Hopkins Graham Greene Greene's Henry Hopkins Howards End Hughes Hughes's human Jane Austen John John Donne King Lady later Lawrence Lawrence's Letters literary literature lives London lovers lyric Malory's manuscript marriage married Marvell Marvell's ment Milton modern Morte Darthur narrative narrator nature Newbold Revel Nostromo novel Old English Oscar Wilde Oxford Philip play poem poem's poet poetic poetry political prose published reader repr Robert Romantic seems sense Shaw Shaw's Sidney Sidney's Sir Thomas sonnet soul spiritual stanza Stoppard story Supp T. S. Eliot Ted Hughes Thomas Malory tion Tom Stoppard verse vols wife Wilde's William woman writing wrote York