John Dryden: Dramatist, Satirist, TranslatorAMS Press, 1988 - 258 sivua |
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Tulokset 1 - 3 kokonaismäärästä 46
Sivu 86
... language itself , that depend for their drama on the existence of language , or the act of writing , or the physi- cal fact of written or spoken language . In Holyday 86 Transition , Satire to Translation.
... language itself , that depend for their drama on the existence of language , or the act of writing , or the physi- cal fact of written or spoken language . In Holyday 86 Transition , Satire to Translation.
Sivu 99
... language used in such a way that the ideas and events or scene within the language are referred to as objects existing apart from the language , so that there is an understanding between the writer and the reader that these things could ...
... language used in such a way that the ideas and events or scene within the language are referred to as objects existing apart from the language , so that there is an understanding between the writer and the reader that these things could ...
Sivu 192
... language ap- pearing despite the differences between English and Middle Scots as languages , and within the linguistic evidence the two oddest bits are ( I think ) the most revealing . Virgil , in Aeneid Book II , says that the ser ...
... language ap- pearing despite the differences between English and Middle Scots as languages , and within the linguistic evidence the two oddest bits are ( I think ) the most revealing . Virgil , in Aeneid Book II , says that the ser ...
Sisältö
DRYDEN IN CONTEXT | 1 |
Dryden and Satire | 41 |
Drydens Theory and Practice of Satire | 55 |
Tekijänoikeudet | |
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Absalom and Achitophel Aeneas Aeneid ancient Augustus Caesar Aureng-Zebe Book Casaubon century classical comedy contrast couplet criticism dactylic hexameter den's Denham Discourse Dorset Douglas Douglas's dramatic Drummond Dryden Dryden's Aeneis Dryden's version Dryden's Virgil Eclogues edition Elizabethan Emperor England English epic epistle essay example fact Gavin Douglas Georgics give Greek heroic Holyday Homer Horace Indamora John John Dryden Johnson Juvenal Kinsley language later Latin Lauderdale Lauderdale's Lear least literal literary literature Loeb London Love Lucretius Mac Flecknoe means meter Middle Scots Milton Mithridates modern Morat Noyes Ogilby original Ovid Ovid's parallels passage Persius Persius's plate play poem poet poetic poetry political Pope predecessor preface prose published quoted reader recent rhyme words Roman Rome satire Satire III satirist satyr satyr play says scene scholar seems Segrais sort Swift symbols Temple's Theocritus theory thou tion tragedy verse translation Virgil translation Virgilian writing Xiphares