The Poems of John DrydenOxford University Press, 1913 - 606 páginas Oxford edition. The facsimiles are reproductions of title pages of earlier editions. |
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Página xvi
... common and natural . It is paralleled by the taunt thrown at Antony by Cassius in Shakespeare's play : The posture of your blows are yet unknown . Another case in which a misprint has been unduly assumed occurs in Baucis and Philemon ...
... common and natural . It is paralleled by the taunt thrown at Antony by Cassius in Shakespeare's play : The posture of your blows are yet unknown . Another case in which a misprint has been unduly assumed occurs in Baucis and Philemon ...
Página xxi
... common good ; Dryden has Ev'n then , industrious of the Common Good ; where the comma marks an emphasis and a consequent pause . Where there is evidence of careless proof - reading the stops in this edition have been altered , but not ...
... common good ; Dryden has Ev'n then , industrious of the Common Good ; where the comma marks an emphasis and a consequent pause . Where there is evidence of careless proof - reading the stops in this edition have been altered , but not ...
Página 12
... common Tombe had found , The first small prospect of a rising hill With various notes of Joy the Ark did fill : Yet when that flood in its own depths was drown'd , It left behind it false and slipp'ry ground , And the more solemn pomp ...
... common Tombe had found , The first small prospect of a rising hill With various notes of Joy the Ark did fill : Yet when that flood in its own depths was drown'd , It left behind it false and slipp'ry ground , And the more solemn pomp ...
Página 18
... COMMON COUNCIL of it . As perhaps I am the first who ever presented a work of this nature to the Metropolis of any Nation , so is it likewise consonant to Justice , that he who was to give the first Example of such a Dedication should ...
... COMMON COUNCIL of it . As perhaps I am the first who ever presented a work of this nature to the Metropolis of any Nation , so is it likewise consonant to Justice , that he who was to give the first Example of such a Dedication should ...
Página 48
... Common - wealths- men , for professing so plausibly for the Government . You cannot be so Unconscionable , as to charge me for not Subscribing of my Name ; for that woud reflect too grosly upon your own Party , who never dare , though ...
... Common - wealths- men , for professing so plausibly for the Government . You cannot be so Unconscionable , as to charge me for not Subscribing of my Name ; for that woud reflect too grosly upon your own Party , who never dare , though ...
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Términos y frases comunes
Ajax Arms bear behold betwixt Blood Breast call'd Ceyx Chaucer Cinyras cou'd Coursers Crime cry'd dare Death design'd Dryden e're Earth editors wrongly give Ev'n ev'ry Eyes Face fair Fame Fate Father fear Fight Fire Flames Fool forc'd Friend Gods Grace Grecian Hand happy hast Head Heart Heav'n Honour Iphis Jebusites JOHN DRYDEN Jove kind King Laws Light liv'd live Lord lov'd Love Lucretius Maid mighty Mind mortal Muse Myrrha Name never Night Numbers Nymph o'er o're once Ovid Pain Persius plain Play pleas'd Pleasure Poet Pow'r Praise Pray'r Priam Prince PROLOGUE publick Rage rais'd receiv'd rest Roman Rome sacred Satyr Seas seem'd Sejanus shou'd Sight Sire Soul stood sweet Sword Tears Text thee Theocritus Theseus thou thought Translation try'd turn'd Twas Verse Virgil Vows Wife Winds Words wou'd wretched Youth