The Poems of John Dryden, Volumen1Press of C. Whittingham, 1822 |
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Página 60
... raised him many enemies , and which was sometimes as unseasonably resented as it was exerted . Trapp is angry that he calls the sacri- ficer in the Georgics " The Holy Butcher : " the trans- lation is not indeed ridiculous ; but Trapp's ...
... raised him many enemies , and which was sometimes as unseasonably resented as it was exerted . Trapp is angry that he calls the sacri- ficer in the Georgics " The Holy Butcher : " the trans- lation is not indeed ridiculous ; but Trapp's ...
Página 64
... raised Jove , from his dark prison freed , Those weights took off that on his planet hung , Will gloriously the new - laid works succeed . ' He has elsewhere shown his attention to the plane- tary powers ; and in the preface to his ...
... raised Jove , from his dark prison freed , Those weights took off that on his planet hung , Will gloriously the new - laid works succeed . ' He has elsewhere shown his attention to the plane- tary powers ; and in the preface to his ...
Página 82
... raised by such subjects and such a writer . With the stanza of Davenant he has sometimes his vein of parenthesis , and incidental disquisition , and stops his narrative for a wise remark . The general fault is , that he affords more ...
... raised by such subjects and such a writer . With the stanza of Davenant he has sometimes his vein of parenthesis , and incidental disquisition , and stops his narrative for a wise remark . The general fault is , that he affords more ...
Página 85
... reason than to feel . The conflagration of a city , with all its tumults of concomitant distress , is one of the most dreadful spectacles which this world can offer to human eyes ; yet it seems to raise little THE LIFE OF DRYDEN . 85.
... reason than to feel . The conflagration of a city , with all its tumults of concomitant distress , is one of the most dreadful spectacles which this world can offer to human eyes ; yet it seems to raise little THE LIFE OF DRYDEN . 85.
Página 86
John Dryden. to human eyes ; yet it seems to raise little emotion in the breast of the poet ; he watches the flame coolly from street to street , with now a reflection , and now a simile , till at last he meets the King , for whom he ...
John Dryden. to human eyes ; yet it seems to raise little emotion in the breast of the poet ; he watches the flame coolly from street to street , with now a reflection , and now a simile , till at last he meets the King , for whom he ...
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Términos y frases comunes
Absalom and Achitophel Æneid Almanzor Annus Mirabilis appear Behold Belgian bless'd blessing bold censure character Charles Charles Dryden church criticism defend design'd Duke Duke of Guise Duke of Lerma Dutch e'en elegant English excellence eyes fame fancy fate father faults fear fight fire Fire of London flames fleet force genius Georgics give happy haste Heaven heroic honour Jacob Tonson JOHN DRYDEN Juvenal kind King knew labour lines live Lord mighty mind monarchs Muse nature never numbers o'er once Ovid passions perhaps play poem poet poetical poetry praise preface prey prince racter reason reign religion rest rhyme royal sacred satire says seems ships Sir Robert Howard Sophocles soul stanza tempest thee things thou thought tion tragedy translation true Twas verses Virgil virtue wind words write written