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"dwells" - 3 õppematerjali

George Gordon Byron
5
doc

George Gordon Byron

And men and nature reeled as if with wine. Whom did I seek around the tottering hall? totter tudisema, tuikuma For thee. Whose safety first provide for? Thine. provide varustama, andma, tagama And when convulsive throes denied my breath The faintest utterance to my fading thought, utterance ütlus, lausung To thee--to thee--e'en in the gasp of death My spirit turned, oh! oftener than it ought. Thus much and more; and yet thou lov'st me not, And never wilt! Love dwells not in our will. wiltnärbuma, väsima, longu vajuma Nor can I blame thee, though it be my lot To strongly, wrongly, vainly love thee still. vainly edevalt, asjatult, edutult Baironism: · Isikliku saatuse erakordsus · Kirglik tahe · Traagiline armastus · Saatuslik viha · Individualism · Lahkheli iseendaga · Võitlus vabaduse ja armastuse eest · Looduse ja vabaduse vastandamine kehtivatele ühiskonnanormidele · Vaen ümbrusega

Kirjandus → Kirjandus
51 allalaadimist
Philip Larkin’s Poetry-Themes-Form-Style-Imagery and Symbolism
30
odt

Philip Larkin’s Poetry: Themes, Form, Style, Imagery and Symbolism

poem anecdotal that is almost story) about what entirely consists his “new way of exploring that territory” (1988, 272), Bayley does not do more than reform the poetic text definition that we have handled in the present work - a text in which the information highly is concentrated and organized in the following terms: “I have you use the shorthand of poetry to block in a situation in a way that prose would have to do much dwells laboriously, and AT to much to greater length” (1988, 272). It is as if the text, when concentrating itself, aspired to the luminous outbreak that is epiphanies: “to moment that is unique, drawing to together of event and experience into to singular impression which art dog to render whole” (Bayley 1988, 274). These epiphanies are, therefore, the revelation of which only the poet has seen,

Varia → Kategoriseerimata
1 allalaadimist
American Literature
10
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American Literature

Though 19th century science is of only historical interest, his command of the English language, or at least of its Yankee version, is unimpeachable, so his definitions cannot be dismissed lightly. Melville somewhat famously asserts in the novel that the whale is a "spouting fish with a horizontal tail." His use of the word "fish" here, however, is not meant a denial of the mammalian characteristics of the order Cetacea, but rather simply as an ad hoc definition as an animal that dwells in the sea; however, he goes on to dismiss Linnaeus' classification as "humbug". He attempts a taxonomy of whales largely based on size, based on his assertion that other characteristics, such as the existence of a hump or baleen, make the classification too confusing. Borrowing an analogy from publishing and bookbinding, he divides whales into three "books", called the Folio Whale (largest), Octavo Whale, and the Duodecimo Whale (smaller), represented respectively by the sperm whale, the

Keeled → Inglise keel
23 allalaadimist


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