The Letters of John ClareClarendon Press, 1985 - 705 strán (strany) The letters, to a large circle of correspondents, cover his whole writing life and provide a remarkable portrait of the poet. |
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Výsledky 1 - 3 z 72.
Strana vii
... text , rather than a text deliberately ' polishd ' ( to use Clare's own word ) for publication . Not surprisingly , arguments have raged about the textual and critical conse- quences of printing Clare's poems as they appear in his ...
... text , rather than a text deliberately ' polishd ' ( to use Clare's own word ) for publication . Not surprisingly , arguments have raged about the textual and critical conse- quences of printing Clare's poems as they appear in his ...
Strana xxxi
... text ) . The text Clare's way with spelling and punctuation is highly idiosyn- cratic : I have tried to be as faithful as possible to what he wrote , although there are bound to be disagreements over some readings , and I can only plead ...
... text ) . The text Clare's way with spelling and punctuation is highly idiosyn- cratic : I have tried to be as faithful as possible to what he wrote , although there are bound to be disagreements over some readings , and I can only plead ...
Strana 345
... Text : MS John Rylands Library My dear Taylor [ Saturday , 13 August 1825 ] 2 I am at Milton & have gotten my friend Henderson to read over the proof while I made such alterations as struck me at the time I also read it over my self ...
... Text : MS John Rylands Library My dear Taylor [ Saturday , 13 August 1825 ] 2 I am at Milton & have gotten my friend Henderson to read over the proof while I made such alterations as struck me at the time I also read it over my self ...
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able Address answer appeared beautiful believe Clare to Taylor comes copy correct coud dear Taylor Deeping draft Drury Emmerson expect fact fancy fear feel further give hand happy hear heard Helpstone Hessey hope intended James John Clare JOHN TAYLOR July June keep kind leave letter Library lines live London look Lord March matter mean meet mention Milton mind nature never Northampton opinion perhaps Peterborough pleasure poems poet Postmark present printed proofs publication published recieved remain reply respects rest seems seen sent shoud sincerely somthing Songs Sonnet soon Stamford tell Text thank thee thing thought told trouble turn verse wish woud write written wrote