Richard Lovelace, Volume 96"The acclaimed Twayne's Authors Series of literary criticism offers in-depth introductions to the lives and works of writers, the history and influence of literary movements and to the development of literary genres. This online series features the content of nearly 600 books that comprise three print series --United States Authors, English Authors and World Authors -- each of which were carefully coordinated with input from librarians and educators to include authors universally studied in high schools and colleges. Twayne's Author Series is an ideal starting point for research papers on literary works and figures, special projects and presentations. Students can quickly gain results by searching for a specific author, combining search criteria for a more complex search, or exploring thematic and chronological topics."--Publisher's description. |
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Page 60
... stanza , ideas of freedom and confinement are manip- ulated paradoxically . The poet lies in jail " tangled in her hair ” and " fettered to her eye " yet thereby is made free by love's " uncon- fined " wings . The stanza describing , in ...
... stanza , ideas of freedom and confinement are manip- ulated paradoxically . The poet lies in jail " tangled in her hair ” and " fettered to her eye " yet thereby is made free by love's " uncon- fined " wings . The stanza describing , in ...
Page 93
... stanza , he yields a point only to force her to yield the entire argument in the last . In the second stanza he sees himself as free of the lady and as aggressively re - establishing his identity in an active world , and the language in ...
... stanza , he yields a point only to force her to yield the entire argument in the last . In the second stanza he sees himself as free of the lady and as aggressively re - establishing his identity in an active world , and the language in ...
Page 139
... stanza forms . Men like Donne and Herbert showed resourcefulness in inventing a different stanza for nearly every lyric and in adhering to the form throughout the poem . In such matters , Lovelace was quite their equal . In all , his ...
... stanza forms . Men like Donne and Herbert showed resourcefulness in inventing a different stanza for nearly every lyric and in adhering to the form throughout the poem . In such matters , Lovelace was quite their equal . In all , his ...
Contents
Preface Chronology | 11 |
Life and Works | 15 |
A Poets Interests | 31 |
Copyright | |
11 other sections not shown
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Common terms and phrases
A. E. Waite Alexis Althea amatory Anthony à Wood Aramantha beauty C. V. Wedgwood Carew Cavalier Cavalier Poets celebrated Charles Christian clothing conceit confinement couplets court courtly courtly love creatures Cupid cynical death Donne Donne's doth dream dress drink elegies English Epicurean erotic expressing Fair Beggar genre gentleman golden age Grasshopper Greek Anthology hair Herrick Holland honor idea imagery inconstancy influence insect Jonson joys Kentish Petition king lace lace's lady lady's Lely libertine lines Literary Loose Saraband Lovelace wrote Lovelace's poem lover Lucasta Mario Praz Marvell Marvell's mind mistress Mock Song moral nature Odes painting paradox pastoral Petrarch Petrarchan poet poet's poetic poetry political praise prison references Renaissance Richard Lovelace Robin Skelton Royalist satire Scrutiny seventeenth century sexual singing sonnet stanza Stoic Stoicism Suckling tears thee theme thine thou tion turn verse Wedgwood Whilst Wilkinson woman writing