10 LIVROS EM INGLÊS RELACIONADOS COM «COLONELLING»
Descubra o uso de
colonelling na seguinte seleção bibliográfica. Livros relacionados com
colonelling e pequenos extratos deles para contextualizar o seu uso na literatura.
1
Comedy: A Geographic and Historical Guide
... dwelling, And out he rode a Colonelling. (Butler 1; lines 1-14) As we will see,
such deliberately awkward rhymes (dwelling/Colonelling) are an essential part of
comic and satiric verse (then and now), as is the mixture of high and low diction ...
2
The Poetical Works of Samuel Butler: With Life and Critical ...
1 ' He rode a-colonelling : ' the Knight (if Sir Samuel Luke was Mr Butler's hero)
was not only a Colonel in the Parliament army, but also Scoutmaster- general in
the counties of Bedford, Surrey, &c. — * ' Mirror of Knighthood : ' there was a book
...
Samuel Butler, Charles Cowden Clarke, 1868
1 ' He rode a-colonelling : ' the Knight (if Sir Samuel Luke was Mr Butler's hero)
was not only a Colonel in the Parliament army, but also Scoutmaster- general in
the counties of Bedford, Surrey, &c. — 2 ' Mirror of Knighthood : ' there was a
book ...
4
A Glossary and Etymological Dictionary of Obsolete and ...
And for thy sake 1 have shed many a tear. 1 Paat K. Hen. vi* Sweet villain ! most
dearest, my collop. Wintea's Tale. Colonelling, a word invented by Butler to
signify the riding forth in the capacity of a colonel, in allusion to Hudibras, the
notn de ...
5
Nichol's library edition of the British poets: with memoir ...
1 ' He rode a-colonelling:' the Knight (if Sir Samuel Luke was Mr Butler's hero)
was not only a Colonel in the Parliament army, but also Scoutmaster- general in
the counties of Bedford, Surrey, &c. — * ' Mirror of Knighthood : ' there was a book
...
George Gilfillan, William Shakespeare, 1862
6
A glossary and etymological dictionary of obsolete and ...
Colonelling, a word invented by Butler to signify the riding forth in the capacity of
a colonel, in allusion to Hudibras, the nom de guerre of Sir Samuel Luke, who
was a Colonel in the service of the Republican Parliament, Then did sir knight ...
7
Hudibras: In three parts, written in the time of the late wars
10 With long-ear'd rout, to battle sounded; And pulpit, drum ecclesiastic, Was
beat with fist, instead of a stick : Then did Sir Knight abandon dwelling, And out
he rode a colonelling. instrument of the two : for the latter serves only to rouse the
...
8
Plain-Dealing, in answer to Plain-English, a sermon ... for ...
And Pulpit, Dntffl-Ecclefiajtick, Was beat with Fist, instead of a Stick- Then did Sir
Prig abandon Dwelling, And out he went a Colonelling. Phil. How can a Parson
be Sir Prig ? Orth. That's soon answered ,. for he's only a Bachelor of Arts j and as
...
... of them knew wherefore: When Gospel-Trumpeter, surrounded With long-ear'd
rout, to battle sounded, And pulpit, drum ecclesiastick, Was beat with fist, instead
of a stick; Then did Sir Knight abandon dwelling, And out he rode a colonelling.
In line 7, however, he begins a series of more complex polysyllabic rhymes: '
swear for' / 'wherefore'; 'surrounded' / 'sounded'; 'Ecclesiastick' / 'a stick'; 'dwelling'
/ 'Colonelling'. The ingenuity here is very much like that shown by the waspish ...
John Strachan, Richard Terry, 2011