| Simon Dentith - 2000 - Страниц: 228
...of ballads, made popular by the publication of Percy's Reliques of Ancient English Poetry (17 65): I put my hat upon my head, And walked into the Strand;...there I met another man, Whose hat was in his hand. (Johnson, 1964: 269) Equally, he could use parody in the orher direction, to artack the unthinking... | |
| Anne Ferry - 2001 - Страниц: 318
...Here is Johnson's well-known stanza, as Wordsworth quoted it: "I put my hat upon my head, And walk'd into the Strand, And there I met another man Whose hat was in his hand." To advance his argument that what made this stanza bad poetry was not simple form or natural language... | |
| Rudolf Mrázek - 2002 - Страниц: 338
...described in Celeste Langan's story of nineteenth-century England was being repeated in the Indies: I put my hat upon my head And walked into the Strand, And there I met another man Whose hat was in his hand.168 The meeting of a bourgeois and a beggar through the common language of the public road might... | |
| William Harmon - 2003 - Страниц: 566
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| 吴世昌 - 2003 - Страниц: 214
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| William Wordsworth, Samuel Taylor Coleridge - 2003 - Страниц: 356
...of life and nature. Such verses have been triumphed over in parodies of which Dr Johnson's stanza22 is a fair specimen. I put my hat upon my head, And walk'd into the Strand, And there I met another man Whose hat was in his hand. Immediately under these... | |
| Charles W. Eliot - 2004 - Страниц: 468
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