Poems and Prose of John DrydenPenguin Books, 1955 - 356 sivua |
Kirjan sisältä
Tulokset 1 - 3 kokonaismäärästä 68
Sivu 212
... kind of verse in any language unnatural ) , shall I , for their vicious affectation , condemn those excellent lines of Fletcher which are written in that kind ? Is there anything in rhyme more constrained than this line in blank verse ...
... kind of verse in any language unnatural ) , shall I , for their vicious affectation , condemn those excellent lines of Fletcher which are written in that kind ? Is there anything in rhyme more constrained than this line in blank verse ...
Sivu 291
... kind : ' Tis in your nature , and your noble mind . ARIMANT . I'll to the King , and straight my trust resign . INDAMORA . His trust you may , but you shall never mine . Heav'n made you love me for no other end , But to become my ...
... kind : ' Tis in your nature , and your noble mind . ARIMANT . I'll to the King , and straight my trust resign . INDAMORA . His trust you may , but you shall never mine . Heav'n made you love me for no other end , But to become my ...
Sivu 336
... kind , and all my sorrows end . If Nourmahal prevail , I know my fate . MELESINDA . I pity , as my own , your hard estate ; But what can my weak charity afford ? I have no longer int'rest in my lord . Nor in his mother , he ! she owns ...
... kind , and all my sorrows end . If Nourmahal prevail , I know my fate . MELESINDA . I pity , as my own , your hard estate ; But what can my weak charity afford ? I have no longer int'rest in my lord . Nor in his mother , he ! she owns ...
Sisältö
INTRODUCTION | 7 |
PROLOGUE TO THE TEMPEST 1670 | 97 |
PROLOGUE AND EPILOGUE TO THE UNIVERSITY | 104 |
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Yleiset termit ja lausekkeet
Absalom ABSALOM AND ACHITOPHEL Achitophel ancients ARIMANT Aristotle arms AURENG-ZEBE beauty Ben Jonson betwixt blank verse blessed Chaucer CHAWN comedy crime Crites crowd crown cursed dare David death DIANET disdain Dryden Edmund Berry Godfrey EMPEROR English Eugenius ev'n ev'ry eyes fame fate father fear foes fortune French give grace hate heart heav'n honour humour INDAMORA Jebusites Jonson judgement kind King laws Lisideius live Lord Mac Flecknoe MELESINDA mind MORAT muse nature ne'er never NOURMAHAL numbers o'er Ovid pains passion peace pity play pleasure Plot poem poesy poet Popish Plot pow'r praise prince reason reign rhyme Sanhedrin satire scene sense Shadwell Shadwell's Shakespeare shun Silent Woman soul speak stage thee Thomas Shadwell thou thought throne Titus Oates tragedy truth twas Virgil virtue words writ write youth