The Poems of John Dryden, Volumen2Clarendon Press, 1958 - 2104 páginas |
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Página 560
... Pleasures I possest : Cruel Creature , to deceive me ! First to love , and then to leave me ! II Had you the Bliss refus'd ... Pleasure Songs in Amphitryon , with the Musick ( S ) then S 8 Then I ] I ΤΟ S Nor to leave her will endeavour ...
... Pleasures I possest : Cruel Creature , to deceive me ! First to love , and then to leave me ! II Had you the Bliss refus'd ... Pleasure Songs in Amphitryon , with the Musick ( S ) then S 8 Then I ] I ΤΟ S Nor to leave her will endeavour ...
Página 649
... Pleasure as I can bear : He fully satisfies my Expectation , he Treats his Subject home : His Spleen is rais'd , and he raises mine : I have the Pleasure of Concernment in all he says ; He drives his Reader along with him ; and when he ...
... Pleasure as I can bear : He fully satisfies my Expectation , he Treats his Subject home : His Spleen is rais'd , and he raises mine : I have the Pleasure of Concernment in all he says ; He drives his Reader along with him ; and when he ...
Página 668
... Pleasure and Entertainment , of those Gentlemen and Ladies , who tho they are not Scholars , are not Ignorant ... Pleasure is one of the Ends of Poetry , but that it is only a means of compassing the only end , which is Instruction ...
... Pleasure and Entertainment , of those Gentlemen and Ladies , who tho they are not Scholars , are not Ignorant ... Pleasure is one of the Ends of Poetry , but that it is only a means of compassing the only end , which is Instruction ...
Contenido
Lines on Milton | 540 |
The Prologue and Epilogue to The History of Bacon in Virginia | 551 |
Prologue to The Mistakes | 563 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Términos y frases comunes
Æneid amongst Ancient Aristophanes AULUS PERSIUS FLACCUS bear behold betwixt Breast Cæsar call'd Casaubon Corydon cou'd Coursers Crimes crown'd Daphnis design'd e're Earth Ennius Ev'n ev'ry Eyes fair Fame Fate fear Flocks Flood Friend fruitful GEORGICS give Gods Grace Grecians Ground hand happy hast Head Heav'n Hind Honour Horace Iphis JOHN DRYDEN Jove Juvenal kind King lab'ring Labours leave live Livius Andronicus Lord Lordship lov'd Love Lucilius MENALCAS Mind MOPSUS Muse Name Nature never Night Numbers Nymph o're Pacuvius pains Panther Persius Plain pleas'd Pleasure Poem Poet Poetry Pow'r Praise Pray'r publick Quintilian Race rage receiv'd Reign rest rise Roman Rome sacred Satire Satyr Shades shew shou'd sing Skies Song Soul Swain sweet thee thou thought Trees try'd turn'd us'd Verse Vices Vines Virgil Wife Winds Woods words wou'd Youth