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 ix
... appear in this form : Had Orphans sung it in the neather Sphere . But there are cases in which the true reading may reasonably be a matter of doubt . Thus in Eleonora the original text gives : And some descending Courtier from above Had ...
... appear in this form : Had Orphans sung it in the neather Sphere . But there are cases in which the true reading may reasonably be a matter of doubt . Thus in Eleonora the original text gives : And some descending Courtier from above Had ...
Página x
... appear . The work was not well done , and some of the corruptions which were then allowed to defile the text have appeared in every later edition . The first editor with a name was Thomas Broughton , who published two incomplete collec ...
... appear . The work was not well done , and some of the corruptions which were then allowed to defile the text have appeared in every later edition . The first editor with a name was Thomas Broughton , who published two incomplete collec ...
Página xi
... appear , Pity the Virgins of each Theatre ! Christie remarks that ' Theatre ' was pronounced with the a long . When Dryden wrote An Universal Metempsychosis , Christie gives a stress both to the penultimate and to the ante- penultimate ...
... appear , Pity the Virgins of each Theatre ! Christie remarks that ' Theatre ' was pronounced with the a long . When Dryden wrote An Universal Metempsychosis , Christie gives a stress both to the penultimate and to the ante- penultimate ...
Página xiii
... appear in the first and only contemporary edition . The last word was afterwards corrupted into ' Breast ' . This piece of nonsense with its absurd suggestion of tattooing is printed in Christie's text and consequently in Dr ...
... appear in the first and only contemporary edition . The last word was afterwards corrupted into ' Breast ' . This piece of nonsense with its absurd suggestion of tattooing is printed in Christie's text and consequently in Dr ...
Página 12
... appear'd ; Thus ( Royall Sir , ) to see you landed here Was cause enough of triumph for a year : Nor would your care those glorious joyes repeat II Till they at once might be secure and great : Till your kind beams by their continu'd ...
... appear'd ; Thus ( Royall Sir , ) to see you landed here Was cause enough of triumph for a year : Nor would your care those glorious joyes repeat II Till they at once might be secure and great : Till your kind beams by their continu'd ...
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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