English Poetry of the Seventeenth Century |
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Page 64
... tree and the Holme , The Stock - dove and the Blackbird should not come , Whose muting on those trees doe make to grow Rots curing Hyphear , and the Miseltoe . ( p . 19 ) But whereas Drayton works from a geographical sense of place and ...
... tree and the Holme , The Stock - dove and the Blackbird should not come , Whose muting on those trees doe make to grow Rots curing Hyphear , and the Miseltoe . ( p . 19 ) But whereas Drayton works from a geographical sense of place and ...
Page 68
... trees of the opening lines are all obvious properties for this drama , and the adjectives they are given are general ones ( fair , lofty , sturdy ) . Similarly , Randolph's serpent is predictably speckled and his snake venomous . But ...
... trees of the opening lines are all obvious properties for this drama , and the adjectives they are given are general ones ( fair , lofty , sturdy ) . Similarly , Randolph's serpent is predictably speckled and his snake venomous . But ...
Page 141
... tree . ( 11.967-72 ) Both the enclosure image and the burning tree suggest a monarchic ideal close to Waller's , and they link with the analysis of antagonism between court and Parliament which occupies much of the body of the poem ...
... tree . ( 11.967-72 ) Both the enclosure image and the burning tree suggest a monarchic ideal close to Waller's , and they link with the analysis of antagonism between court and Parliament which occupies much of the body of the poem ...
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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