The Works of Edmund Spenser, Volumen1Bell and Daldy, 1862 - 318 páginas |
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Página xvi
... thought might poffibly have escaped a hasty exa- mination , we were furprised to meet with a memorandum which , we have fome reason to think , establishes a fact in the poet's history that has never before been fuf- pected . Todd , and ...
... thought might poffibly have escaped a hasty exa- mination , we were furprised to meet with a memorandum which , we have fome reason to think , establishes a fact in the poet's history that has never before been fuf- pected . Todd , and ...
Página xxxii
... thought , he could never have risen to the rank of a great , bold , and original writer . Spenfer adopted " ruftic language " with the strictest dramatic propriety , for he at once faw the unfitnefs of making herdfmen and clowns talk ...
... thought , he could never have risen to the rank of a great , bold , and original writer . Spenfer adopted " ruftic language " with the strictest dramatic propriety , for he at once faw the unfitnefs of making herdfmen and clowns talk ...
Página xlvi
... thought . But there an end for this once , and fare you well , till God or fome good Aungell putte you in a better minde . ” He fincerely compaffionated Spenfer's error of judg- ment , in preferring his " Faerie Queene " to his " Nine ...
... thought . But there an end for this once , and fare you well , till God or fome good Aungell putte you in a better minde . ” He fincerely compaffionated Spenfer's error of judg- ment , in preferring his " Faerie Queene " to his " Nine ...
Página lxx
... thought by Raleigh to be neceffary ) , and printed , with the seventeen fonnets to the leaders of the aristocracy , & c . , after the whole body of the poem had been worked off in the press . It was , as we have faid , in the autumn of ...
... thought by Raleigh to be neceffary ) , and printed , with the seventeen fonnets to the leaders of the aristocracy , & c . , after the whole body of the poem had been worked off in the press . It was , as we have faid , in the autumn of ...
Página lxxviii
... poet afterwards saw reason to introduce . Sidney and Leicester are both spoken of as dead ; and of the latter Spenfer reproachfully fays , — " His name is worne alreadie out of thought , lxxviii THE LIFE OF SPENSER .
... poet afterwards saw reason to introduce . Sidney and Leicester are both spoken of as dead ; and of the latter Spenfer reproachfully fays , — " His name is worne alreadie out of thought , lxxviii THE LIFE OF SPENSER .
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