🏆 Win $50 — Monthly contest Enter →🏆 Monthly contest — 5 winners get $50 · Enter now →

by Anne Ferry
"Sixteenth-century writers and their readers generally shared the view inherited from antiquity that the oration was the single most authoritative model of prose composition, even for a piece of writing not spoken to a public audience but intended for readers. ... What is meant by poetic language in these discussions is quite simply the words and their arrangements to be found in sixteenth-century poems. ... It is therefore by focusing especially on poems that the following chapters will explore questions about sixteenth-century language and the assumptions on which it was predicated." -- from the Preface * Edmund Spenser, 1552-1599. CONTENTS: 1. The Verb to Read * Definitions * Reading Writing * Reading Speaking * Reading Things * The Narrator as Reader in The Faerie Queene 2. Parts of Speech * Paired Adjectives and Nouns * Noun Adjectives, Noun Substantives * Shifting Parts of Speech * Words as Names * Names Proper and Improper * A Grammatical Lesson In The Faerie Queene 3. Translati
No reviews yet. Be the first!
Roald Dahl
N.W. MARTIN