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" Tis not the' poet, but the age is prais'd. Wit's now arriv'd to a more high degree; Our native language more refin'd and free. Our ladies and our men now speak more wit In conversation, than those poets writ. "
The Works of John Dryden: In Verse and Prose - Página 154
por John Dryden - 1859
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The Works of John Dryden, Volume X: Plays: The Tempest, Tyrannick Love, An ...

John Dryden - 2023 - 586 páginas
...dull, and conversation low. . . . Wit's now arriv'd to a more high degree; Our native language more refin'd and free. Our Ladies and our men now speak more wit In conversation, than those poets writ. Dryden was eventually attacked for this concept of the primitive manners of the "last age" in The Friendly...
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Patterns and Perspectives in English Renaissance Drama

Eugene M. Waith - 1988 - 324 páginas
...present and former wit are familiar: Wit's now arriv'd to a more high degree; Our native language more refin'd and free. Our ladies and our men now speak more wit In conversation than those poets writ. (11. 23-26) The polish of Terence's style is similarly ascribed by some to his familiarity with Scipio...
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The Just and the Lively: The Literary Criticism of John Dryden

Michael Werth Gelber - 2002 - 358 páginas
...the Poet, but the Age is prais'd. Wit's now arriv'd to a more high degree; Our native Language more refin'd and free. Our Ladies and our men now speak more wit In conversation, than those Poets writ. 2 When he published the play, he included the epilogue and, despite the public outcry, defiantly kept...
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Restoration Literature: An Anthology

Paul Hammond - 2002 - 484 páginas
...poet, but the age is praised. Wit's now arrived to a more high degree, Our native language more refined and free. Our ladies and our men now speak more wit...fears). Or else his writing is not worse than theirs. 30 Yet, though you judge (as sure the critics will) That some before him writ with greater skill, In...
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Gender, Theatre, and the Origins of Criticism: From Dryden to Manley

Marcie Frank - 2002 - 194 páginas
...current poet: the poet's inability to exceed his own age leaves him with apparently two alternatives. Then, one of these is, consequently, true; That what...fears) Or else his writing is not worse than theirs. (27-30) Either he can imitate the witty lords and ladies of the court who are his models, or he can...
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Gender, Theatre, and the Origins of Criticism: From Dryden to Manley

Marcie Frank - 2002 - 194 páginas
...current poet: the poet's inability to exceed his own age leaves him with apparently two alternatives. Then, one of these is, consequently, true; That what...fears) Or else his writing is not worse than theirs. (27-30) Either he can imitate the witty lords and ladies of the court who are his models, or he can...
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The Major Works

John Dryden - 2003 - 1024 páginas
...poet but the age is praised. Wit's now arrived to a more high degree; Our native language more refined and free. Our ladies and our men now speak more wit...fears), Or else his writing is not worse than theirs. 30 Yet, though you judge (as sure the critics will), That some before him writ with greater skill,...
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The Reformation

Joseph Arrowsmith, Juan A. Prieto Pablos - 2003 - 206 páginas
...language as one of the main reasons: Wit's now ariv'd to a more high degree; Our native Language more refin'd and free. Our Ladies and our men now speak more wit In conversation, than those poets writ. (11: 20 1 ; 23-26) As the poet himself conceded, this was a bold claim. He therefore set out to substantiate...
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The Age of Elizabeth in the Age of Johnson

John T. Lynch - 2003 - 244 páginas
...Nearly all moderns have a leg up on the Renaissance: Dryden writes of the authors of the last age, "Our Ladies and our men now speak more wit / In conversation than those Poets writ." He writes elsewhere that Elizabethan authors, "had they liv'd now, had doubtless written more correctly...
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Enchanted Ground: Reimagining John Dryden

William Andrews Clark Memorial Library Staff, William Andrews Clark Memorial Library, University of California, Los Angeles. Center for 17th- & 18th- Century Studies, University of California, Los Angeles, Center for 17th- & 18th- Century Studies Staff - 2004 - 370 páginas
...conformed his genius to the age. He grounds his boast on a general advance of civilization or manners: 'Our Ladies and our men now speak more wit / In conversation, than those Poets writ' - those poets being 'Shakespeare, Fletcher, and Jonson' (11:201, 204). This view of contemporary mores...
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