The Poems of John Dryden: 1693-1696Longman, 1995 - 402 páginas Volume Four covers poems published between 1693 and 1696, principally Dryden's translations from Juvenal and Persius, and those from Ovid and Homer included in the miscellany Examen Poeticum (1693). This new edition represents the most informative and accessible edition of Dryden's poetry, incorporating extensive new research and providing an invaluable resource for all those interested in English poetry and Restoration culture. |
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Página 86
... mean ) command A pilgrimage to Meroe's burning sand , Through deserts they would seek the secret spring , And holy water for lustration bring . How can they pay their priests too much respect , Who trade with heaven , and earthly gains ...
... mean ) command A pilgrimage to Meroe's burning sand , Through deserts they would seek the secret spring , And holy water for lustration bring . How can they pay their priests too much respect , Who trade with heaven , and earthly gains ...
Página 116
... mean , ev'n he who points the way , 279–80 ] . These lines both commence with quotation marks in 1693 , signalling that they are a sententious utterance . 280. Body is the subject , soul the object of the sentence . 281. ' Xerxes is ...
... mean , ev'n he who points the way , 279–80 ] . These lines both commence with quotation marks in 1693 , signalling that they are a sententious utterance . 280. Body is the subject , soul the object of the sentence . 281. ' Xerxes is ...
Página 151
... mean conceit , this darling mystery Which thou think'st nothing , friend , thou shalt not buy : Nor will I change , for all the flashy wit That flattering Labeo in his Iliads writ . Thou , if there be a thou , in this base town , Who ...
... mean conceit , this darling mystery Which thou think'st nothing , friend , thou shalt not buy : Nor will I change , for all the flashy wit That flattering Labeo in his Iliads writ . Thou , if there be a thou , in this base town , Who ...
Contenido
The First Satire of Juvenal | 3 |
The Third Satire of Juvenal | 19 |
The Sixth Satire of Juvenal | 43 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Términos y frases comunes
Andromache Aulus Persius Flaccus citing this example commentators Congreve Crispinus D.'s addition D.'s expansion D.'s note D.'s substitution Date and publication David Hopkins death Dedication Discourse Concerning Satire earth edited English Epilogue Ev'n expansion of Ovid's eyes fame father fear gloss gods Golding grace Greek headnote heaven Hector Henninius Henry Purcell Higden Holyday Homer honour Horace husband Iliad J. R. Mason John Dryden Jove King Kneller Latin lines living Lord Metamorphoses Milton Miscellany Nero numbers Oldham omits Juvenal's reference Ovid Ovid's Oxford Paul Hammond play poem poet praise Prateus Prateus and Schrevelius Prologue published Purcell rhyme Roman Rome Rymer Sandys Satire of Juvenal Satire of Persius says Schrevelius Sejanus seventeenth-century Shadwell Sixth Satire Song Sowerby Stapylton substitution for Juvenal's substitution for Ovid's Theatre thee Thomas Yalden thou Tonson translation verse Virgil wife William William Congreve Winn