Thoth, Volume 16Graduate students of the English Department, Syracuse University, 1976 - American literature |
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Page 15
... Says Cicero , " There is no greater bane to friendship than adulation , fawning , and flattery " ( p . 209 ) . He continues , " He opens his ears widest to flatteries who is a flatterer of himself " ( p . 211 ) . Apemantus says much the ...
... Says Cicero , " There is no greater bane to friendship than adulation , fawning , and flattery " ( p . 209 ) . He continues , " He opens his ears widest to flatteries who is a flatterer of himself " ( p . 211 ) . Apemantus says much the ...
Page 24
... say or do nearly anything to kindle her interest in him . The young man , for instance , intrudes upon the master's ... says that it has " all the freshness , the flushed . fairness , of the conception untouched and untried ; it was ...
... say or do nearly anything to kindle her interest in him . The young man , for instance , intrudes upon the master's ... says that it has " all the freshness , the flushed . fairness , of the conception untouched and untried ; it was ...
Page 32
... say in favor of the broken style throughout the prologue ; he says , " by the brokeness of his composition the poet makes himself master of a certain weapon he could possess himself of in no other way . ' 13 1 66 To follow the prologue ...
... say in favor of the broken style throughout the prologue ; he says , " by the brokeness of his composition the poet makes himself master of a certain weapon he could possess himself of in no other way . ' 13 1 66 To follow the prologue ...
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actions appears associated attempt audience awareness bear becomes beginning behavior Book Britomart character charity chastity Christian comedy comic commandment complete concept concern created critics Cupid death describes directions disguise elements Elizabethan English Ethics experience explain fact faith fertility final friends friendship Gallathea gives Guingamor Hell Hieronimo hope human imagination important justice king Kora L'Allegro lady lais language Lanval less levels liberality lines London lover means Milton mortal Mouse Mucedorus myth narrative narrator nature Neptune notes Paraday pattern Penseroso perhaps Persephone play poem poet poetic poetry position possible present Press progression provides Psyche references remains representative reveals revenge role says scene seen sense sentence serves shepherd soliloquy story structure Studies suggests supernatural takes things thou Timon transformation true University Venus virgin virtue vision writes York