English Poetry of the Seventeenth Century |
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Page 9
... lives possible , and the way in which these genteel lives are presented very largely as social events , in which dance , song , and the- atre are parts of a social round which replaces work and service to the State , symbolize the ...
... lives possible , and the way in which these genteel lives are presented very largely as social events , in which dance , song , and the- atre are parts of a social round which replaces work and service to the State , symbolize the ...
Page 48
... live yet ? and yet live in pleasure ? Quarles articulates concern , whereas Donne would be more likely to com- municate near - despair , and the manner indicates final confidence of a kind Donne rarely shows : Since thou art dead ( Lord ) ...
... live yet ? and yet live in pleasure ? Quarles articulates concern , whereas Donne would be more likely to com- municate near - despair , and the manner indicates final confidence of a kind Donne rarely shows : Since thou art dead ( Lord ) ...
Page 98
... live handsomely ? Trust not too far Thy self to waving Seas . ( ' Advice to my best Brother ' , ll . 1–2 ) Lovelace is not concerned with matters of state , even though Francis Lovelace belongs to the public world . His poem deals with ...
... live handsomely ? Trust not too far Thy self to waving Seas . ( ' Advice to my best Brother ' , ll . 1–2 ) Lovelace is not concerned with matters of state , even though Francis Lovelace belongs to the public world . His poem deals with ...
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Abraham Cowley Absalom and Achitophel achievement Achitophel Appleton House awareness Ben Jonson Butler Carew Charles Christ Civil classical Cleveland concerned contemporary context contrast Cooper's Hill Cotton country house country-house poems court courtly Cowley Cowley's Crashaw critical Cromwell Davenant death Denham Donne Donne's Drayton Dryden edited Elizabethan England English epic Epigrams Epistle feeling Fletcher Gondibert Herbert heroic Herrick Horatian Hudibras idea ideal individual interest Jacobean James John John Donne Jonson King King's literary Literature London Lord Lovelace Lycidas MacFlecknoe Marvell Marvell's Milton mock-heroic monarch offers Oldham Oxford Paradise Lost Paradise Regained Parliament pastoral Penshurst Phineas Fletcher poem's poet poet-figure poet's poetic poetry political Poly-Olbion praise present reader religious Rochester Rochester's royalist Samson Samson Agonistes Satan satire satirist secular seems seen sense seventeenth century social society Song Spenser stanza stress style Suckling suggests thee theme thou tradition Vaughan verse Waller writing