Sir Philip Sidney: Selected Prose and PoetryUniversity of Wisconsin Press, 1983 - 539 Seiten |
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Seite xx
... voice of Astrophel for Sidney's personal voice , whereas it is Sidney's personal voice and more — in short , it is his artistic voice . When Sidney returned to The Countess of Pembroke's Arcadia to revise it , he brought with him the ...
... voice of Astrophel for Sidney's personal voice , whereas it is Sidney's personal voice and more — in short , it is his artistic voice . When Sidney returned to The Countess of Pembroke's Arcadia to revise it , he brought with him the ...
Seite xxv
... voice . " This voice reached poetic maturity in Astrophel and Stella , but remains a voice not always fully appreciated because the artistic voice of Sidney has too often been taken as merely his personal voice . The heroic nature of ...
... voice . " This voice reached poetic maturity in Astrophel and Stella , but remains a voice not always fully appreciated because the artistic voice of Sidney has too often been taken as merely his personal voice . The heroic nature of ...
Seite 161
... voice . What Sidney discovered was that these two demands were not essentially in conflict , but could be pulled ... voice . " While this voice is his in the sense that it stems from him , it is not really his . It is the voice of poetry ...
... voice . What Sidney discovered was that these two demands were not essentially in conflict , but could be pulled ... voice . " While this voice is his in the sense that it stems from him , it is not really his . It is the voice of poetry ...
Inhalt
Introduction | 3 |
The Old Arcadia | 9 |
Other Poems from the Old Arcadia | 68 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Amphialus Anaxius answered Antiphilus apparel Argalus armor Astrophel and Stella Basilius beauty body breast cause Cecropia Cleophila Clitophon countenance Dametas daughter dear death Defence of Poesy delight desire disdain Dorus doth Duke ears Eclogues evil excellent eyes face fair fair ladies fear force fortune give grief Gynecia hand hath heart heaven heavenly Helots honor Ismenus Kalander king kiss knight Laconia lady leave live lodge look Lord mind Miso Musidorus nature never noble Old Arcadia Palladius Pamela Parthenia passion perfect Phalantus Philanax Philoclea pity poem poesy poetry poets praise prince Princess Pyrocles Queen reason shepherds Sidney's sight Sir Philip Sidney sister solitariness song sorrow soul speak speech sweet sword tears tell thee Thessalia things thou thought unto verse virtue virtuous voice wherein whereof withal words worthy wound yield Zelmane Zelmane's