The Poems of John DrydenOxford University Press, 1910 - 606 páginas Oxford edition. The facsimiles are reproductions of title pages of earlier editions. |
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Página xiv
... reason why Mon- mouth should trust him , since his interest lies all in Monmouth's advancement . Royal Youth , fix here , Let Int'rest be the Star by which I Steer . Hence to repose your Trust in Me was wise , Whose Int'rest most in ...
... reason why Mon- mouth should trust him , since his interest lies all in Monmouth's advancement . Royal Youth , fix here , Let Int'rest be the Star by which I Steer . Hence to repose your Trust in Me was wise , Whose Int'rest most in ...
Página xvii
... reason to abandon some original readings which I once thought capable of defence , and that I have occasionally corrected an error which I had at first overlooked . The matter of spelling opens a difficult question . It must be admitted ...
... reason to abandon some original readings which I once thought capable of defence , and that I have occasionally corrected an error which I had at first overlooked . The matter of spelling opens a difficult question . It must be admitted ...
Página xviii
... reason for altering these forms . There is certainly none where the changed spelling obscures a rhyme or a scansion . In the Epilogue to Tyrannick Love , the editors make Dryden rhyme slattern ' with ' Catherine ' , though he printed ...
... reason for altering these forms . There is certainly none where the changed spelling obscures a rhyme or a scansion . In the Epilogue to Tyrannick Love , the editors make Dryden rhyme slattern ' with ' Catherine ' , though he printed ...
Página xix
... reason for printing the correct form . Dryden wrote , as he had a right to do , ' Perithous , ' a form of as sound Latin as the Pirithous ' , upon which his editors insist . On his faults in this kind his editors have been severe , but ...
... reason for printing the correct form . Dryden wrote , as he had a right to do , ' Perithous , ' a form of as sound Latin as the Pirithous ' , upon which his editors insist . On his faults in this kind his editors have been severe , but ...
Página xxi
... reason it excludes one version from Theocritus and one from Lucretius . Nor has room been found for a few poems which have at various times without authority or probability been attributed to Dryden . On the other hand , it has been ...
... reason it excludes one version from Theocritus and one from Lucretius . Nor has room been found for a few poems which have at various times without authority or probability been attributed to Dryden . On the other hand , it has been ...
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Términos y frases comunes
Æneid Arms Asses Ears bear Beauty behold betwixt Blood Breast call'd Chaucer Cinyras cou'd Coursers Crime dare Death design'd Dryden e're editors wrongly give EPILOGUE Ev'n ev'ry Eyes Face fair Fame Fate Father fear Fight Fire Flames Fool forc'd Fortune Friend Gods Grace Hand happy hast Head Heart Heav'n Honour Jebusites JOHN DRYDEN Jove kind King Laws liv'd live Lord lov'd Love Lover Lucretius Maid mighty Mind Muse Name never Night Noble Numbers Nymph o'er o're once Ovid Pain Persius plain Play pleas'd Poem Poet poor 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 Soul stood sweet Sword Tears Text thee Theocritus Theseus thou thought Translation try'd turn'd Twas Verse Vertue Virgil Wife Winds words wou'd Youth ΙΟ