Milton Early Poems

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Alfred Tennyson (Author), Robert W. Hill (ed.) Illustrator: NA: Tennyson's Poetry, (A Norton Critical Edition), Second Edition, W.W. Norton & Company/Viva Books 2002 ISBN: 9780393972795

New Softcover NA The Norton Critical Edition of TennysonaEUR s Poetry, Second Edition, represents a significant revision of its predecessor and assimilates the Tennyson scholarship of the last twenty-five years. The texts of the poems are based on the Eversley edition of TennysonaEUR s Works (published in nine volumes, 1907-09). Under earlier interdiction, the significant Trinity College, Cambridge, manuscripts have been incorporated here. The poems are organized chronologically, from Unpublished Early Poems and The Devil and the Lady through Poems (1872-92). The Princess appears in its entirety. Each poem is accompanied by ample explanatory annotation. "Contexts" includes early assessments of Tennyson and his poetry by Arthur Henry Hallam, John Wilson, John Wilson Croker, John Stuart Mill, John Sterling James Spedding and James Knowles. "Criticism" collects seven seminal essaysaEUR"six of them new to the Second EditionaEUR"on both Tennyson and the major poems. Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick, T. S. Eliot, Isobel Armstrong Herbert F. Tucker, Christopher Ricks, Gertrude Himmelfarb, and Robert W. Hill, Jr., present their varied perspectives. A Chronology Selected Bibliography, and Index are also inclnded. Contents: The Texts of the Poems aEURc Earliest Poems (ca. 1823ff.): From Unpublished Early Poems (1931) and The Devil and the Lady (1930) aEURc Translation from ClaudianaEUR s "Proserpine" aEURc From The Devil and the Lady aEURc Armageddon aEURc From Poems by Two Brothers (1827) Memory aEURc Remorse aEURc "I Wander in Darkness and Sorrow" aEURc From Poems, Chiefly Lyrical (1830) aEURc Ode to Memory aEURc Song ("A spirit haunts the yearaEUR s last hours") aEURc The Dying Swan aEURc The Sleeping Beauty aEURc A Character aEURc Supposed Confessions aEURc The Kraken aEURc Mariana aEURc Sir Launcelot and Queen Guinevere aEURc From Poems (1832, dated 1833) aEURc "My Life Is Full of Weary Days" aEURc The Lady of Shalott aEURc Mariana in the South aEURc A'none aEURc To _______ (With the Following Poem) aEURc The Palace of Art aEURc The Hesperides aEURc A Dream of Fair Women aEURc To ______ ("As when with downcast eyes we muse") aEURc To J. S. aEURc The Lotos-Eaters aEURc The Eagle aEURc From Poems (1842), Including Several Other Written between 1833 and 1846 aEURc Ulysses aEURc The Two Voices aEURc Saint Simeon Stylites aEURc Tithonus aEURc Tithon aEURc Tiresias aEURc Break, Break, Break aEURc The Epic aEURc "Move Eastward, Happy Earth" aEURc A Farewell aEURc Locksley Hall aEURc The Vision of Sin aEURc To____ (After Reading a Life and Letters) aEURc The Princess (1847; 1849aEUR"51) aEURc In Memoriam A. H. H. (1833aEUR"49; 1850) aEURc Poems 1850aEUR"1872 aEURc To the Queen aEURc To E. L., on His Travels in Greece aEURc Ode on the Death of the Duke of Wellington aEURc The Daisy aEURc De Profundis aEURc To the Rev. F. D. Maurice aEURc The Charge of the Light Brigade aEURc Maud; A Monodrama (1855) aEURc In the Valley of the Cauteretz aEURc Milton aEURc Enoch Arden aEURc Northern Farmer (Old Style) aEURc Northern Farmer (New Style) aEURc "Flower in the Crannied Wall" aEURc The Higher Pantheism aEURc In the Garden at Swainston aEURc From Idylls of the King, (1857_1874) aEURc Dedication aEURc The Coming of Arthur aEURc Merlin and Vivien aEURc Lancelot and Elaine aEURc The Holy Grail aEURc Pelleas and Ettarre aEURc The Last Tournament aEURc Guinevere aEURc The Passing of Arthur aEURc To the Queen aEURc From Poems (1872aEUR"1892) aEURc The Revenge aEURc Battle of Brunanburh aEURc Rizpah aEURc "Frater Ave Atque Vale" aEURc Despair aEURc To Virgil aEURc The Dead Prophet aEURc The Ancient Sage aEURc Vastness aEURc Locksley Hall Sixty Years After aEURc Demeter and Persephone aEURc To Ulysses aEURc To Mary Boyle aEURc FaraEUR"FaraEUR"Away aEURc By an Evolutionist aEURc Parnassus aEURc Merlin and the Gleam aEURc The Oak aEURc June Bracken and Heather aEURc The Dawn aEURc The Making of Man aEURc God and the Universe aEURc The Silent Voices aEURc Crossing the Bar aEURc Contexts aEURc Arthur Henry Hallam aEURc On Some of the Characteristics of Modern Poetry, and on the Lyrical Poems of Alfred Tennyson aEURc John Wilson ["Christopher North"] aEURc TennysonaEUR s Poems aEURc John Wilson Croker aEURc Poems by Alfred Tennyson aEURc John Stuart Mill aEURc TennysonaEUR s Poems aEURc John Sterling aEURc Poems by Alfred Tennyson aEURc James Printed Pages: 720. 2nd edition

[SW: Tennyson's Poetry, (A Norton Critical Edition), Second EditionAlfred Tennyson (Author), Robert W. Hill (ed.)9780393972795]

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MILTON. - DEMARAY, J.G., Milton and the Masque Tradition. The early Poems, "Arcades", & Comus. Cambridge (Mass.), Harvard Univ. Press, 1968.

16, 188 pp., 2 leaves, 8 plates with 17 illustr. Orig. cloth with orig. dust jacket (dust jacket wavy, body of the book at the upper margin throughout water-stained and wavy).

[SW: Englischsprachige Literatur (Sekundärliteratur); English Literature]

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Tutschka, Victoria: Romantic Thoughts in Wordsworth s I wandered lonely as a cloud, GRIN VERLAG, Dezember 2009, Besorgungstitel - vorauss. Lieferzeit 3-5 Tage. ISBN: 3640489365
William Wordsworth is known as one of the most influential English Romantic Poet. Born in the year 1770 in Cockermouth, a beautiful landscape of the English Lake District, his whole life and work was characterized by the love of nature. Yet in his early ages he and his beloved sister Dorothy were taught important poetry of Shakespeare and Milton by their rarely present father. William was treated harsh by his relatives, when he had to stay at his mother's home in Penrith as a teenager, but as a result he found comfort, tranquility and happiness in exploring the beauty of the nature on his own. In the first years of the 1790s he visited France and was impressed by the revolutionary force of the Republican movement. During his stay he fell in love with Annett Vallon, a French woman and got a daughter with her. Due to the developing British-French war, he had to leave France soon and saw Anett and their daughter seldom again, but always stayed in contact with them. In 1793 Wordsworth wrote the first version of the so-called manifesto of English Romantic Criticism: the 'Preface to Lyrical Ballads' with experimental poems. Together with his friend, the poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge, he produced the first of four editions of 'Lyrical Ballads' in the year 1798. In this central Romantic work, he defines poetry as ' the spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings from emotions recollected in tranquility.'.

NEUBUCH! 2009. 24 S. 210 mm 210 mm x 148 mm x 2 mm; Akademische Schriftenreihe, Bd. V139441

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Scholl, Guido: The poem Lycidas in James Joyce's Ulysses, GRIN VERLAG; GRIN VERLAG, Juli 2008, Besorgungstitel - vorauss. Lieferzeit 3-5 Tage. ISBN: 3640116399
Seminar paper from the year 2001 in the subject English Language and Literature Studies - Literature, printed single-sided, grade: 1,5, University of Hannover (Englisches Seminar), course: Ulysses, 6 entries in the bibliography, language: English, comment: This paper works out how the poem Lycidas is interwoven especially with the opening Chapters of James Joyce's most popular work. It also takes a view on the rest of the book and on its formal setup. , abstract: The references to other pieces of literature play an important role In James Joyce's Ulysses.The title itself, alluding to Homer's Odyssey, is the first of such references to be found whenreading the book. Other famous examples are Stephen Dedalus' treatment of Shakespeare'sHamlet and Chapter 12, which is a parody of different styles of literature. As the readershould expect of a work deeply concerned with religious matters, John Milton also is one ofthe poets whose works are frequently being referred to throughout Ulysses. While thepoems Paradise Lost and Paradise Regained (to a lesser degree also Samson Agonistes)are those among Milton's poems which are used the most by Joyce, the poem Lycidas playsa central role in the 2nd chapter. The fact that it is placed so early in the book makes thepoem's meaning to the book very special, even more so, as one has to keep in mind that thestructure of Ulysses is elementary for the understanding of its contents.

NEUBUCH! 2008. 36 S. 210 mm 210 mm x 144 mm x 38 mm; Akademische Schriftenreihe, Bd. V109625

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