English Critical Texts: 16th Century to 20th CenturyDennis Joseph Enright, Ernst De Chickera Oxford University Press, 1962 - 398 páginas |
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Página 112
... genius , taste , and learning go ; Launch not beyond your depth , but be discreet , And mark that point where sense and dulness meet . Nature to all things fix'd the limits fit , And wisely curb'd proud man's pretending wit . As on the ...
... genius , taste , and learning go ; Launch not beyond your depth , but be discreet , And mark that point where sense and dulness meet . Nature to all things fix'd the limits fit , And wisely curb'd proud man's pretending wit . As on the ...
Página 245
... genius . He mingled as it were the elements of human nature as colours upon a single pallet , and arranged them in the composition of his great picture according to the laws of epic truth , that is , 795 according to the laws of that ...
... genius . He mingled as it were the elements of human nature as colours upon a single pallet , and arranged them in the composition of his great picture according to the laws of epic truth , that is , 795 according to the laws of that ...
Página 379
... Genius , but he is not a poetical genius . ' On Pope , v . Essay Supplementary to the Preface ( 1815 ) . For Coleridge on Dryden , v . Marginalia in Pepys : ' Yet Cowley was a Poet , which ... is more than ( in the strict use of the ...
... Genius , but he is not a poetical genius . ' On Pope , v . Essay Supplementary to the Preface ( 1815 ) . For Coleridge on Dryden , v . Marginalia in Pepys : ' Yet Cowley was a Poet , which ... is more than ( in the strict use of the ...
Contenido
An Essay of Dramatic Poesy | 50 |
An Essay on Criticism III | 131 |
Preface to Lyrical Ballads | 162 |
Derechos de autor | |
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English Critical Texts: 16th Century to 20th Century Dennis Joseph Enright,Ernst De Chickera Vista de fragmentos - 1962 |
Términos y frases comunes
action admiration Aeneas Aeneid alive ancient Aristotle beauty Ben Jonson better blank verse cause character Chaucer Cicero classics comedy composition Crites criticism Dares Phrygius delight diction divine doth drama Dryden effect emotion English Ennius Eugenius Euripides excellent express faults feelings French genius give Greek hath Homer honour Horace human imagination imitation Johnson judge judgement Keats Keats's kind knowledge language learning Lisideius living manner mean Metaphysical Poets metre metrical mind modern moral nature never object observed Ovid Paradise Lost passions perfection perhaps persons Petrarch philosopher Plato Plautus play pleasure plot Plutarch poem poesy poet poet's poetic poetry praise produced prose reader reason rhyme scenes Sejanus sense Shakespeare soul speak spirit stage stanza style things thought tion tragedy true truth unity Velleius Paterculus Virgil virtue words Wordsworth write