Poems and Prose of John DrydenPenguin Books, 1955 - 356 sivua |
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Tulokset 1 - 3 kokonaismäärästä 47
Sivu 209
... verse , or the the measure of verse kept exactly without rhyme . These numbers therefore are fittest for a play ; the others for a paper of verses or a poem Blank verse being as much below them as rhyme is improper for the drama . And ...
... verse , or the the measure of verse kept exactly without rhyme . These numbers therefore are fittest for a play ; the others for a paper of verses or a poem Blank verse being as much below them as rhyme is improper for the drama . And ...
Sivu 211
... verse may want it as much in rhyme , and he who has it will avoid errors in both kinds . Latin verse was as great a confinement to the imagination of those poets as rhyme to ours , and yet you find Ovid saying too much on every subject ...
... verse may want it as much in rhyme , and he who has it will avoid errors in both kinds . Latin verse was as great a confinement to the imagination of those poets as rhyme to ours , and yet you find Ovid saying too much on every subject ...
Sivu 212
... verse may be also used , and content myself only to assert , that in serious plays where the subject and characters are great and the plot unmixed with mirth , which might allay or divert these concernments which are produced , rhyme is ...
... verse may be also used , and content myself only to assert , that in serious plays where the subject and characters are great and the plot unmixed with mirth , which might allay or divert these concernments which are produced , rhyme is ...
Sisältö
INTRODUCTION | 7 |
PROLOGUE TO THE TEMPEST 1670 | 97 |
PROLOGUE AND EPILOGUE TO THE UNIVERSITY | 104 |
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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