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Journal Article
English Language Notes (2000) 37 (4): 21–29.
Published: 01 June 2000
... Malory citations are from the Caxton version o f Le Morte D Arthur (1485). L ineation is derived from E ugene V inaver s Malory s Works. (Oxford: O xford UP) 1971. THE DAYLILY AND THE DIOSCURI IN BEN JO N SO N S CARY-MORISON ODE In 1889 Swinburne singled o u t the lines about a lily o f a day from Jo...
Journal Article
English Language Notes (2003) 41 (2): 43–56.
Published: 01 December 2003
...Jalal Uddin Khan Copyright © 2003 Regents of the University of Colorado 2003 December 2003 43 His Life, His Art, and His Influence (Ithaca: Cornell UP, 1937), is still useful for the various strands of Greek and Latin classicism that Collins reworks in his odes. 10 Any reference to Collins...
Journal Article
English Language Notes (2005) 43 (1): 48–59.
Published: 01 September 2005
... in light of Parker s implica tion that Young reasons by analogy for 68 1/2 lines (660-728 1/02) only to end his argum ent anticlimactically in lines 728 1/2 34. Lines 660-734: after invoking G od s aid (660-670), the speak er uses two forms of analogy between nature and immortality (671-734) .2 First...
Journal Article
English Language Notes (2003) 41 (2): 36–43.
Published: 01 December 2003
...) or William Collins odes. Line 20 defines the humble cottage as Drest in sweet simplicity whilst line 34 mentions sweet solitude. Far from being a conventional 38 English Language Notes attribute, sweet is an eighteenth-century aesthetic notion which has rarely been noted but which was theorised most...
Journal Article
English Language Notes (2005) 43 (2): 59–68.
Published: 01 December 2005
...) holds a secure place in the literary history of the mid-eighteenth century, mainly because of his slen der collection of Odes on Several Descriptive and Allegoric Subjects (1746) .2 This collection of twelve odes, in more than one way, voices Collins s interest in such poetic forebears as Spenser...
Journal Article
English Language Notes (2001) 38 (3): 20–33.
Published: 01 March 2001
... be their own G od.14 M ore im m edi ately, The Kingis Quair s declared influence, Boethius, has Lady Philosophy sing o f G od s controlling celestial power.15 In stanza 195,ju st before the repetition o f that key line, stere is coupled with gyd th at is thy gyd and stere it can only m ean th...
Journal Article
English Language Notes (2000) 37 (4): 19–21.
Published: 01 June 2000
...) 173-198; esp.188-9. 3 All Malory citations are from the Caxton version o f Le Morte D Arthur (1485). L ineation is derived from E ugene V inaver s Malory s Works. (Oxford: O xford UP) 1971. THE DAYLILY AND THE DIOSCURI IN BEN JO N SO N S CARY-MORISON ODE In 1889 Swinburne singled o u t the lines...
Journal Article
English Language Notes (2006) 44 (1): 221–225.
Published: 01 March 2006
...Patrick Pritchett Copyright © 2006 Regents of the University of Colorado 2006 The B reaking of the V e sse ls: To w a r d a Lyr ic of M essianic Form Pa t r ic k P r it c h e t t "G od becomes God when all creatures speak God forth: there 'God' is born." Meister Eckhart, German Sermon 27...
Journal Article
English Language Notes (2000) 38 (2): 48–61.
Published: 01 December 2000
... address tew ife. In the intercourse of every day he begins: D aughter o f G od and m an, accomplished Eve. In a m om ent of stronger feeling, D aughter o f G od an d m an, IMMORTAL Eve. W hat majesty in the cadence of the line; w hat dignity, what reverence in the attitude, both of giver and receiver...
Journal Article
English Language Notes (2019) 57 (1): 116–128.
Published: 01 April 2019
... of embarkation—Alexandria, Antwerp, Buenos Aires, Colón, Hamburg, Lisbon, San Francisco, Shanghai, Yokohama, and so on. It is the sort of illusion rhapsodized by Fernando Pessoa’s heteronym Álvaro de Campos, the British naval engineer whose poem “Ode marítima” (“Maritime Ode,” 1915) praises “O Grande Cais...
FIGURES
Journal Article
English Language Notes (2012) 50 (1): 157–161.
Published: 01 March 2012
... g w ith a bunch o f o th e r w h ite m ale associates, fu lly e x p e c tin g due to th is partner's p o w e r in the firm alo n g w ith his o u tm oded assum ption that we'd be just as racist as he is that we'd either fin d it uproar ious o r m e re ly pretend to. O nly one o f the o th er guys...
Journal Article
English Language Notes (2001) 38 (3): 56–68.
Published: 01 March 2001
... on the Spring. 1 Gray s ode ends with the following two stanzas: To C ontem plation s sober eye Such is the race of Man: A nd they th a t creep, an d they th a t fly Shall end where they began. Alike the busy and the gay But flutter th r o life s little day, In F o rtu n e s varying colours drest: O r chill d...
Journal Article
English Language Notes (2004) 41 (4): 1–10.
Published: 01 June 2004
... of amphibology is very clearly conveyed by these examples. As a m ode o f dis course, the use of am phibology is narrowly restricted as regards the speaker, who, if n o t a deity, m ust necessarily possess some supernatural power of divination. In the two instances cited, the messages, gestural or verbal...
Journal Article
English Language Notes (2006) 44 (2): 313–321.
Published: 01 September 2006
... as the sta rtin g -p oint o f his fascinating diachronic "su rve y o f the ways in w hich w ritten w o rds have been used in m od ern art fro m the Im pressionists to the present d a y" (6), it is because p h otography does not ju s t herald a w o rld o f im ages. It also participates, th ro u g h...
Journal Article
English Language Notes (2001) 38 (4): 49–52.
Published: 01 June 2001
... Bulstrode is n o t a sodom ite, in medieval terms, he can be seen as both a blasphem er and usurer. As a blasphem er, be cause of his perverse use o f G od s nam e to justify to him self and others his avarice, pursuit of power, and, m ore specifically, his complicity in the disinheritance of Sarah Dunkirk...
Journal Article
English Language Notes (2010) 48 (1): 177–190.
Published: 01 March 2010
... su bjectivi ty and narrative coherence and fo llo w in g an im perative to excess which jettisons any pre tence o f fram in g , m eaning, and sense.5 Its m ode encourages excessive and senseless expenditure, subordinating m eaning and resolution to the generations o f intense and expulsive effects...
Journal Article
English Language Notes (2002) 39 (4): 1–12.
Published: 01 June 2002
... is p resent in the reference to w andering, an d perhaps against it stands the idea that the D ream er wishes to be a sh eep as opposed to a g o at , o n e who is am ong G od s chosen and will be saved.22 In fact, in the context of Piers Plowman, the obvious sense pro posed by Robertson and H...
Journal Article
English Language Notes (2014) 52 (1): 57–66.
Published: 01 March 2014
... detail, does not resolve itself as a sim ple victory for one m ode or the other, but both continue to inform works of the im agination.4 A lthough readers and scholars diffe r as to the m erits of fantasy as a literary genre, there is little question that, as Tom Shippey has put it, "(tjh e dom in ant...
Journal Article
English Language Notes (2006) 44 (2): 65–72.
Published: 01 September 2006
... in a vexed relatio n to history. A sse rtin g its claim s on m od e rn ity and the present, the colony on the verge o f not being one m ust bear th e b u rd e n so m e w e ig h t o f th e past, th e p o w e r o f its o w n cu rre n cy as to ke n o f a p rim itiv e , archaic prehistory.The African colony...
Journal Article
English Language Notes (2004) 41 (4): 27–50.
Published: 01 June 2004
... contem porary re-inventions of familiar Romantic icons whilst developing fur th e r the au th o r s preoccupation with Keats s p reced en t already visible in the well-known recitation o f the opening of Ode to a June 2004 31 N ightingale in Them & [uz] (in From The School ofEloquence...
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