Thoth, Volumes 14-16Department of English, Syracuse University., 1974 - American literature |
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Page 11
... language of others are precisely those which characterize his own speech . Perhaps the comic effect of Morose's speech prevents it from being irksome to the audience ( although it must be irksome to his servants ) , but his language is ...
... language of others are precisely those which characterize his own speech . Perhaps the comic effect of Morose's speech prevents it from being irksome to the audience ( although it must be irksome to his servants ) , but his language is ...
Page 13
... language functions as an accompaniment to practical joking , knockabout farce , and acts of physical brutality . This turn of events is foreshadowed in Act II when Morose's servant practices the sign language which Morose has devised to ...
... language functions as an accompaniment to practical joking , knockabout farce , and acts of physical brutality . This turn of events is foreshadowed in Act II when Morose's servant practices the sign language which Morose has devised to ...
Page 19
... language , noise , and physical buffoonery are the chief means by which this awareness of the sad state of Epicoene's society is brought about . An analysis of the main characters confirms this view and causes us to realize that the ...
... language , noise , and physical buffoonery are the chief means by which this awareness of the sad state of Epicoene's society is brought about . An analysis of the main characters confirms this view and causes us to realize that the ...
Contents
Images of Woman in Wallace | 13 |
Squeamishness and Exorcism | 37 |
The Relationship of the Super | 45 |
Copyright | |
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Absolon action associated Auden audience awareness beauty becomes Beowulf Bisclavret Blithedale Book Britomart characters charity chastity Chaucer Christian comedy comic Comus concept Coverdale critics Crusoe Crusoe's Cupid Cupid-Psyche death devil disguise dramatic dream Dreamer elements English Epicoene fact Faerie Queene friends friendship Gallathea Graelent Grendel Guido Guingamor Hart Crane hell Hieronimo Hrunting human humor Il Penseroso imagination justice King Knight Kora L'Allegro Lady language Lanval literary London lovers Mandeville's Travels marriage masque medieval Milton moral Morose Morose's Mucedorus myth narrative narrator nature Neptune nymphs Orgilus Paraday Paraday's pattern Penseroso Persephone play play's plot poem poet poetic poetry Press Psyche reader reality relationship revenge Reveries role satire scatological scene sense Sir John Mandeville Spenser spirit Stephen Crane Stevens story structure suggests Swift symbolic Syracuse University theme THOTH thou Timon transformation Troilus and Criseyde Truewit Unferth Univ Venus virgin virtue vision Williams woman York