Proceedings of the British Academy, Volume 121 |
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Page 132
... speak of himself , not only in the third person ( as in Herbert's line , with its turn from ' I ' to the ' he ' who is both Son and Father : ' Why , he that built the world can do much more ' ) , 46 but as a man : vir . To me it would ...
... speak of himself , not only in the third person ( as in Herbert's line , with its turn from ' I ' to the ' he ' who is both Son and Father : ' Why , he that built the world can do much more ' ) , 46 but as a man : vir . To me it would ...
Page 199
... speak of Paradise , but may not reach it . Burns's use of epigraphs is implicit as well as explicit . The ' Address to the Deil ' may be headed by an epigraph from Milton , but its first lines contain another submerged epigraph ; ' O ...
... speak of Paradise , but may not reach it . Burns's use of epigraphs is implicit as well as explicit . The ' Address to the Deil ' may be headed by an epigraph from Milton , but its first lines contain another submerged epigraph ; ' O ...
Page 205
... speak of the ' rural theme ' of the collection as one addressed by a bard who is ' unac- quainted with the necessary requisites for commencing Poet by Rule ' . As Burns put it in the Edinburgh Preface the following year , this bard ...
... speak of the ' rural theme ' of the collection as one addressed by a bard who is ' unac- quainted with the necessary requisites for commencing Poet by Rule ' . As Burns put it in the Edinburgh Preface the following year , this bard ...
Contents
The Origins of the Civilisation of Angkor | 41 |
Yorkshire Writers | 91 |
Shakespeare and the Anagram | 111 |
Copyright | |
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