Carnegie Series in English, Issues 9-12Carnegie-Mellon University Press, 1965 - English literature |
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Page 17
... question : To what extent , precisely , are the Canterbury Tales a work of satire ? From one point of view we might answer the question very easily , simply by running through the Tales collecting an exhibit of disengaged passages and ...
... question : To what extent , precisely , are the Canterbury Tales a work of satire ? From one point of view we might answer the question very easily , simply by running through the Tales collecting an exhibit of disengaged passages and ...
Page 32
... question that naturally arises in our minds as we read Chester- ton's remarks and consider the sort of ironic juxtapositions I sketched above , the first question that has to be answered , is whether all this irony is really there . Are ...
... question that naturally arises in our minds as we read Chester- ton's remarks and consider the sort of ironic juxtapositions I sketched above , the first question that has to be answered , is whether all this irony is really there . Are ...
Page 3
... questions by looking at the poems them- selves : we can . But the trouble is that we answer differently , that we suc ... question and resolves it ; or he tells a story and generalizes upon it - the two parts are tradition- ally separate ...
... questions by looking at the poems them- selves : we can . But the trouble is that we answer differently , that we suc ... question and resolves it ; or he tells a story and generalizes upon it - the two parts are tradition- ally separate ...
Contents
A Book of Satires | 1 |
The Satiric Pattern of The Canterbury Tales | 17 |
The Lighter Side of Swift | 35 |
Copyright | |
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Achilles Adams Aunt Norris Austen Austin Wright Byron Canterbury Canterbury Tales Carnegie Series characters Chaucer comedies comic Cressida criticism death Diana dramatic Elinor Emma English Eumolpus Falstaff father feel Fred Sochatoff give Greek Gulliver Henderson Henry Henry IV Hero human husband Iago ironic John Joyce judgment Kazantzakis kind King Lady Bertram language Launcelot Lawrence Leonato lines literary live Lord lovers Malamud's Marianne Marianne Moore Mencken Merchant of Venice mind moral never novel Othello Petronius pilgrims play poem poet poetry Portia Prince quatrain reader rhyme Richard Roethke role romantic satire Satiricon says scene seems sense Sense and Sensibility Shakespeare sonnet stanza story tale tell theme Theodore Roethke Theseus thing thou tion tragedy Troilus Troilus and Cressida Trojan turn Ulysses Venice verbal ironies VOLUME wife Willie words writing wrote young Zorba Zorba the Greek