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 xi
... sense , that it is hard to see how he passed them even without a collation , and inconceivable that he could have left them if once a collation had called his attention to them . As an editor he had two faults : he was not sure in ...
... sense , that it is hard to see how he passed them even without a collation , and inconceivable that he could have left them if once a collation had called his attention to them . As an editor he had two faults : he was not sure in ...
Página xii
... sense , in Mr. Humphry Ward's English Poets . The editors did not stay to ask themselves why the ghosts should have mounted to the roof of Whitehall , how they could dance in a place so unfit for the exercise , or by what supernatural ...
... sense , in Mr. Humphry Ward's English Poets . The editors did not stay to ask themselves why the ghosts should have mounted to the roof of Whitehall , how they could dance in a place so unfit for the exercise , or by what supernatural ...
Página xiii
... sense the lines might then have would certainly not have been known to Dryden or to Ovid . In one of the versions from Lucretius there is a line which points the contrast between the brief life of Homer and the eternity of his Iliad ...
... sense the lines might then have would certainly not have been known to Dryden or to Ovid . In one of the versions from Lucretius there is a line which points the contrast between the brief life of Homer and the eternity of his Iliad ...
Página xiv
... sense of ' assume ' . An edition published after the deaths of both authors changed ' I ' into ' you ' , taking ' let ' in a hortative sense . This illogical reading is deliberately preferred by Dr. Saintsbury . In some forms used by ...
... sense of ' assume ' . An edition published after the deaths of both authors changed ' I ' into ' you ' , taking ' let ' in a hortative sense . This illogical reading is deliberately preferred by Dr. Saintsbury . In some forms used by ...
Página xvi
... sense . The New English Dictionary supplies no such evidence . The verb was new in Dryden's time , but the noun had been in use for some time , and sometimes had the sense , now obsolete , of handicraft . Its attributive use in the ...
... sense . The New English Dictionary supplies no such evidence . The verb was new in Dryden's time , but the noun had been in use for some time , and sometimes had the sense , now obsolete , of handicraft . Its attributive use in the ...
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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