Selections from the British Satirists: With an Introductory Essay by Cecil HeadlamF. E. Robinson, 1897 - 329 sivua |
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Tulokset 1 - 3 kokonaismäärästä 25
Sivu 4
... interest of being almost the last writer to compose in that native , unrhymed , alliterative verse which his con- temporary Chaucer was sending for ever out of fashion . Chaucer himself , who had learned to handle his weapons by ...
... interest of being almost the last writer to compose in that native , unrhymed , alliterative verse which his con- temporary Chaucer was sending for ever out of fashion . Chaucer himself , who had learned to handle his weapons by ...
Sivu 61
... interest of Garth's Dispensary ' 1699 . has faded with the dispute which gave rise to it , but Matthew Green's ... interests of society are served by the play of human passions , or , as Pope puts it , Extremes in man concur to general ...
... interest of Garth's Dispensary ' 1699 . has faded with the dispute which gave rise to it , but Matthew Green's ... interests of society are served by the play of human passions , or , as Pope puts it , Extremes in man concur to general ...
Sivu 204
... interest never lies- The most have still their interest in their eyes : The power is always theirs , and power is ever wise . Almighty crowd , thou shortenest all dispute , Power is thy essence , wit thy attribute ! Nor faith nor reason ...
... interest never lies- The most have still their interest in their eyes : The power is always theirs , and power is ever wise . Almighty crowd , thou shortenest all dispute , Power is thy essence , wit thy attribute ! Nor faith nor reason ...
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Selections from the British Satirists, with an Introductory Essay (1897) Cecil Headlam Esikatselu ei käytettävissä - 2008 |
Yleiset termit ja lausekkeet
Absalom and Achitophel Addison character Church court criticism doth Dryden dull dulness Dunciad English Essay eyes fame fear foes folly fools friends Gabriel Harvey give gold grace Gulliver's Travels hand hate hath head heart Heaven holy honour Horace Hudibras humour imitation irony John Jonathan Wild Juvenal King knaves laugh learned live look Lord MacFlecknoe mankind manner mind Momus moral muse myche nature ne'er never numbers o'er Persius poem poet political poor Pope Popian praise preche pride priest prince prose quath quoth rage rhyme ridicule saint satire Satire III Satire IV Satire VI satirist Satyre Skelton soul spirit spleen struldbrugs style Swift tell thai thair thee theyr things Thomas Nashe thou thought true truth twas verse vice virtue Whigs wise words write