English Critical Essays: (sixteenth, Seventeenth, and Eighteenth Centuries)Edmund David Jones Oxford University Press, 1947 - 394 páginas |
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Página 5
... force in it . And may not I presume a little further , to show the reasonableness of this word Vates , and say that the holy David's Psalms are a divine poem ? If I do , I shall not do it without the testimony of great learned men ...
... force in it . And may not I presume a little further , to show the reasonableness of this word Vates , and say that the holy David's Psalms are a divine poem ? If I do , I shall not do it without the testimony of great learned men ...
Página 134
... force us on that rock , because we see they are seldom listened to by the audience , and that is many times the ruin of the play ; for , being once let pass without attention , the audience can never recover themselves to understand the ...
... force us on that rock , because we see they are seldom listened to by the audience , and that is many times the ruin of the play ; for , being once let pass without attention , the audience can never recover themselves to understand the ...
Página 212
... force . I know there are to whose presumptuous thoughts Those freer beauties , ev'n in them , seem faults . Some figures monstrous and mis - shap'd appear , Consider'd singly , or beheld too near , Which , but proportion'd to their ...
... force . I know there are to whose presumptuous thoughts Those freer beauties , ev'n in them , seem faults . Some figures monstrous and mis - shap'd appear , Consider'd singly , or beheld too near , Which , but proportion'd to their ...
Contenido
SIR PHILIP SIDNEY 155486 | 1 |
THOMAS CAMPION 15671620 | 55 |
SAMUEL DANIEL 15621619 | 61 |
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action admiration Aeneas Aeneid ancients Aristotle beauties Ben Jonson better blank verse characters Chaucer comedy commendation composition conceit Crites critics delight discourse divine doth Dryden English epic epic poetry Eugenius Euripides excellent fable Faerie Queene fame fancy father fault French genius give glory Gothic Greek hath heroic Homer honour Horace humour Iliad imagination imitation invention Jonson judge judgement kind labour language Latin learning lines Lisideius manner Milton mind modern Muse nature never noble numbers observed Ovid Paradise Lost passion perfection perhaps persons philosopher Pindar Plato Plautus play plot Plutarch poem Poesy poet poetical poetry praise prose reader reason rhyme Romans rules scene sense sentiments Shakespeare Silent Woman sometimes speak spirit stage stanza syllables things thought tion tragedy translated trochee true truth Virgil virtue words write written