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Journal Article
English Language Notes (2002) 39 (3): 31–41.
Published: 01 March 2002
.... W HO WAS PAPINIAN?: THE MEANING(S) OF THE LYRICAL BALLADS EPIGRAPH T he two-volume Lyrical Ballads o f 1800 (and the revised edi­ tions of 1802 and 1805) bore a Latin epigraph Q uam nihil ad genium, Papiniane, tuum ! which is generally overlooked in critical discussions of the work...
Journal Article
English Language Notes (2004) 41 (3): 11–23.
Published: 01 March 2004
... in the Italian fic­ tions to which the Adventures is sometimes compared.5 2. A Ballad ofMalmerophus and Sillera (1582) The fourth and last edition of the Image ofIdleness appeared in 1581, eight years after the publication of Gascoigne s Adven­ tures. Then in 1582 a Ballad ofMalmerophus and Sillera was, printed...
Journal Article
English Language Notes (2000) 37 (4): 90–94.
Published: 01 June 2000
..., Ballad, lyrical ballad, lyric: Wordsworth, Dyer, Mill examines and reem phasizes the im pact of the com m uni­ tarian strand o f lyric poetry evident prim arily in Lyrical Ballads. Janowitz traces the theoretical suppression of this strand via Mill s essay W hat Is Poetry? and offers an alternative...
Journal Article
English Language Notes (2024) 62 (1): 138–141.
Published: 01 April 2024
... : Random House , 1980 . Wordsworth William . Preface to Lyrical Ballads . 2nd ed. 1800 . https://viscomi.sites.oasis.unc.edu/viscomi/coursepack/wordsworth/Wordsworth-1800_LB_Preface.pdf . 9 Though she takes critics to task for doing this, Fash ends by recommending education...
Journal Article
English Language Notes (2023) 61 (2): 145–147.
Published: 01 October 2023
... Rewarded,” 27 . 14 Nelson, “Ballad of Sexual Optimism,” 77 . Works Cited Macmillen Sarah Louise . “ From Herland to #MeToo: Utopia or Dystopia? ” Soundings: An Interdisciplinary Journal 103 , no. 2 ( 2020 ): 243 – 63 . McHugh-Dillon Ruth . “ ‘Let Me Confess...
Journal Article
English Language Notes (2003) 41 (1): 62–69.
Published: 01 September 2003
... Review criticisms of 1802-20. Jeffrey s repeated tactic had been to praise Lyrical Ballads (1798, 1800), the first volume of which had included We are Seven (as well as Tintern Abbey before deploring Wordsworth s later work as the product of corrupted genius. It was thus perfectly pos­ sible for early...
Journal Article
English Language Notes (2007) 45 (2): 65–76.
Published: 01 September 2007
... moved Selena and Selena moved cumbias and love ballads across nation-state borders and across the linguis­ tic assumptions that too often reduce "Latinidad" to Spanish language.To paraphrase Angie Chabram-Dernersesian's assertions regarding transnational cultural production, it is crucial that Latina...
Journal Article
English Language Notes (2010) 48 (2): 201–213.
Published: 01 September 2010
...Hollis Robbins Copyright © 2010 Regents of the University of Colorado 2010 W e A re s e v e n and the F irst B ritish C e n s u s HOLLIS ROBBINS W illiam Wordsworth's "We Are Seven," first published in W ordsworth and Samuel Taylor Coleridge's 1798 volume, Lyrical Ballads, features...
Journal Article
English Language Notes (2000) 37 (3): 47–55.
Published: 01 March 2000
... and Other Poems, William M orris s poem Riding Together, like oth er po­ ems am ong M orris s early works, is an impressive form al experi­ m ent in fusing the dramatic monologue and the old English ballad. In this sense, Morris was clearly working in the tradition of the Romantics, and was obviously...
Journal Article
English Language Notes (2002) 39 (3): 27–31.
Published: 01 March 2002
..., 2nd ed. 1991. W HO WAS PAPINIAN?: THE MEANING(S) OF THE LYRICAL BALLADS EPIGRAPH T he two-volume Lyrical Ballads o f 1800 (and the revised edi­ tions of 1802 and 1805) bore a Latin epigraph Q uam nihil ad genium, Papiniane, tuum ! which is generally overlooked in critical discussions of the work...
Journal Article
English Language Notes (2003) 40 (4): 41–50.
Published: 01 June 2003
...-21; a poem on 21v Fly from O linda (included in oth er p rin t an d m anuscript collections) is also D urfey s though n o t explicitly nam ed as his in this volume. The only authors identified in the first 29 pages are Behn and Durfey. O n page 30 is the A ngler s Ballad by Mr. C otton. It is n...
Journal Article
English Language Notes (2010) 48 (2): 27–35.
Published: 01 September 2010
... institutions. Holcroft's "N arrative of the Facts" opens by painting the atmosphere of public discourse encouraged by the governm ent just before the 1794 trials: Long-Lane and Stone-cutter Street, form erly the mart for the last dying speeches of malefactors, were inlisted [s/c] in the cause; and ballad...
Journal Article
English Language Notes (2005) 42 (3): 21–28.
Published: 01 March 2005
... an attainted family, celebrated in the folk tradition of a depressed and displaced nobility, perhaps most notably in the ballad Grace Nugent, a possible source for the character of the same nam e in Maria Edgeworth s 1812 novel, The Absentee, in which the N ugent nam e is equated with the quest for Irish...
Journal Article
English Language Notes (2005) 43 (2): 102–115.
Published: 01 December 2005
..., and then suddenly and thoroughly lays waste to it. The event depicted in Nutting, rare but not unique in Wordsworth s oeuvre, recalls similar episodes of seemingly ran­ dom acts of violence against nature that occur in The Prelude, in which Wordsworth originally envisioned this lyrical ballad. In Book One...
Journal Article
English Language Notes (2010) 48 (1): 41–47.
Published: 01 March 2010
... corruption.4 Some mock testam ents were m erely brief ballads targeting C atholic practices, such as the ballad o f "Jack a Lents Testam ent" satirizing Lent, and "The W yll o f th e D e v il" (c. 1550) w h e re Beelzebub bequeaths relics to dead popes in Hell. O ther m ock testam ents were anim al testam...
Journal Article
English Language Notes (2010) 48 (2): 85–97.
Published: 01 September 2010
... into the juridical authority of royal law. Sim ilarly, "Adam Bell," a fifteenth-century rhym ing ballad, depicts bandits' dramatic rescue of W illiam Cloudesley, who had been arrested and jailed for trespass and stealing the king's deer in royal forests. Although the king is outraged that W illiam has been liberated...
Journal Article
English Language Notes (2005) 43 (1): 12–33.
Published: 01 September 2005
... of the Libellewas actually aristocratic or even royal, while the later fanciful versions of W hittington s story were aimed at the popular audience of plays, ballads, and chapbooks. While the aristocratic values trans­ ferred to such late Elizabethan heroes as Deloney sJack ofNewbury and Heywood s Four Prentices...
Journal Article
English Language Notes (2016) 54 (1): 43–57.
Published: 01 March 2016
... the ballad stages. M ost readings o f the ballad have co n ­ centrated, im plicitly or explicitly, on the ninth and sixteenth stanzas; the parts of the poem in w h ic h th e ordinal and a rith m e tica l op e ra tio n s o f th e narrator, w h o c o u n ts o u t th e co tta g e girl's siblings and finds...
Journal Article
English Language Notes (2007) 45 (1): 5–20.
Published: 01 March 2007
... and encouraging their own creative departures meant exploring the recesses o f his own creative m ind rather than reiterating, in tedious detail, a fam iliar story of exploring the world. A passage that M elville marked in his copy o f Schiller's Poems and Ballads illustrates this deep connection between...
Journal Article
English Language Notes (2005) 42 (3): 28–33.
Published: 01 March 2005
... Hadfield an d Jo h n McVeagh, eds., Strangers to that Land: British Perceptions ofIrelandfrom the Reformation to the Famine (Gerrards Cross, England: Colin Smythe, 1994) 19. 20 W. J. McCormack, introduction, The Absentee, by Maria Edgeworth. (New York: Oxford, 1988) xxxiv. For m ore on the ballad, see...