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" Yet we see thro' all his poetry, where his enthusiasm flames out most, a certain predilection for the legends of chivalry before the fables of Greece. This circumstance, you know, has given offence to the austerer and more mechanical critics. "
Moral and Political Dialogues: With Letters on Chivalry and Romance - Sivu 263
tekijä(t) Richard Hurd - 1776
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The Monthly Review, Or, Literary Journal, Nide 27

1763 - 556 sivua
...which the ftories of Chivalry had now fallen by the immortal fatire of Cervantes. Yet we fee, thro" all his poetry, where his enthufiafm flames out moft,...legends of Chivalry before the fables of Greece.— The conduct then of thefe two Poets may incline us to think with more refpeft than is common, of the...

Moral and political dialogues: being the substance of several ..., Nide 3

Richard Hurd (bp. of Worcester.) - 1765 - 362 sivua
...but chiefly perhaps, the difcredit into which the ftories of chivalry had now fallen by the immortal fatire of CERVANTES. Yet we fee through all his poetry, where his enthufiafm flames out moft, a certain predileftion for the legends of chivalry before the fables of Greece. THIS circumftance, you know,...

Moral and Political Dialogues: With Letters on Chivalry and Romance: by the ...

Richard Hurd - 1776 - 354 sivua
...but chiefly perhaps, the difcredit into which the ftories of Chivalry had now fallen by the immortal fatire of CERVANTES. Yet we fee through all his poetry,...the legends of Chivalry before the fables of Greece. i ./ . . '. i THIS circumftance, you know, has given offence to the aufterer and more mechanical critics....

The works of Richard Hurd, Nide 4

Richard Hurd (bp. of Worcester.) - 1811 - 456 sivua
...immortal satire' of CERVANTES. Yet we see tfirough all his poetry, where his enthusiasm flames out most, a certain predilection for the legends of Chivalry before the fables of Greece. .<» This ^circumstance, you know, has given LETTER offence to the austerer and more mechanical critics. They...

The Works of Richard Hurd, Lord Bishop of Worcester: Moral and political ...

Richard Hurd - 1811 - 420 sivua
...immortal satire of CERVANTES. Yet we see through all his poetry, where his enthusiasm flames out most, a certain predilection for the legends of Chivalry before the fables of Greece. This circumstance, you know, has given LETTER offence to the austerer and more mechanical critics. They...

A History of English Romanticism in the Eighteenth Century

Henry Augustin Beers - 1898 - 478 sivua
...immortal satire of Cervantes. Yet we see through all his poetry, where his enthusiasm flames out most, a certain predilection for the legends of chivalry before the fables of Greece." Hurd says that, if the " Faerie Queene " be regarded as a Gothic poem, it will be seen to have true...

Hurd's Letters on Chivalry and Romance: With the Third Elizabethan Dialogue

Richard Hurd - 1911 - 190 sivua
...immortal satire of Cervantes. Yet we see thro' all his poetry, where his *"* enthusiasm flames out most, a certain predilection for the legends of chivalry before the fables of Greece. ^' This circumstance, you know, has given offence to the austerer and more mechanical critics. They are ready...

Hurd's Letters on Chivalry and Romance: With the Third Elizabethan Dialogue

Richard Hurd - 1911 - 196 sivua
...immortal satire of Cervantes. Yet we see thro' all his poetry, where his enthusiasm flames out most, a certain predilection for the legends of chivalry before the fables of Greece. This circumstance, you know, has given offence to the austerer and more mechanical critics. They are ready...

English Critical Essays (sixteenth, Seventeenth, and Eighteenth Centuries ...

Edmund David Jones - 1922 - 522 sivua
...immortal satire of Cervantes. Yet we see through all his poetry, where his enthusiasm flames out most, a certain predilection for the legends of chivalry before the fables of Greece. This circumstance, you know, has given offence to the austerer and more mechanical critics. They are ready...

John Milton: 1732-1801

John T. Shawcross - 1995 - 500 sivua
...immortal satire of Cervantes. Yet we see thro' all his poetry, where his enthusiasm flames out most, a certain predilection for the legends of chivalry before the fables of Greece. This circumstance, you know, has given offence to the austerer and more mechanical critics. They are ready...
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