 | David Baker - 2000 - 291 páginas
[ Lo sentimos, pero el contenido de esta página es de acceso restringido. ] | |
 | David Crystal, Hilary Crystal - 2000 - 580 páginas
...century, 'Cicero', in Lives (trans. AH Clough) 29:50 Others for Language all their care express, / And value books, as women men, for Dress: / Their...abound, / Much fruit of sense beneath is rarely found. Alexander Pope, 1711, 'An Essay on Criticism', 305 29:51 [conversation with a courtier] Thus others'... | |
 | Peter Grundy - 2000 - 287 páginas
[ Lo sentimos, pero el contenido de esta página es de acceso restringido. ] | |
 | Kristi Hiner - 2000 - 96 páginas
[ Lo sentimos, pero el contenido de esta página es de acceso restringido. ] | |
 | Richard Daniel Altick - 1969 - 360 páginas
[ Lo sentimos, pero el contenido de esta página es de acceso restringido. ] | |
 | Gerald L. Bruns - 2001 - 300 páginas
...by comparing two passages, Pope's couplet from the Essay on Criticism, which we have already quoted: Words are like Leaves; and where they most abound, Much Fruit of Sense beneath is rarely found and a portion of one of Coleridge's letters to Godwin: Is thinking impossible without arbitrary signs?... | |
 | 2001 - 829 páginas
[ Lo sentimos, pero el contenido de esta página es de acceso restringido. ] | |
 | Olga Fischer, Max Nänny - 2001 - 387 páginas
...Alexander Pope's "An Essay on Criticism" (11. 305-310): Others for Language all their Care express, And value Books, as Women Men, for Dress: Their Praise is still — The Stile is excellent: The Sense, they humbly take upon Content. Words are like Leaves; and where they... | |
 | Stephen Wade - 2002 - 178 páginas
...presented to one of Hanley's friends, and he had written this quotation from Pope's Essay on Criticism: "Words are like leaves and where they most abound, / much fruit of sense beneath is rarely found." In his impish way, he had added: "To Nina with love, after a happy meeting in the land of the Celts."... | |
 | R C Sharma Krishna Mohan - 2002 - 431 páginas
...Pope, a well-known eighteenth century English poet, has used different imagery to convey the same idea: Words are like leaves, and where they most abound Much fruit of sense beneath is rarely found. Pay special attention to modifiers, elaborate prepositions and conjunctions, and phrases to introduce... | |
| |