Literary Criticism of Alexander PopeUniversity of Nebraska Press, 1965 - 181 sivua |
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Sivu xxii
... proper rules for art , neglected the role of original genius , of imagination , or even of feeling in the creation of a literary work . This , too , misrepresents what critics of the period were actually saying . There were certainly ...
... proper rules for art , neglected the role of original genius , of imagination , or even of feeling in the creation of a literary work . This , too , misrepresents what critics of the period were actually saying . There were certainly ...
Sivu 75
... proper and the figured . Of the figured we have already treated , and the proper is what our authors have nothing to do with . Of styles we shall mention only the principal which owe to the Moderns either their chief improvement or ...
... proper and the figured . Of the figured we have already treated , and the proper is what our authors have nothing to do with . Of styles we shall mention only the principal which owe to the Moderns either their chief improvement or ...
Sivu 152
... proper to tragedy , but sometimes descends into the plainer narrative , and sometimes even to that familiar dialogue essential to comedy . However , where it cannot support a sublimity , it always preserves a dignity or at least a ...
... proper to tragedy , but sometimes descends into the plainer narrative , and sometimes even to that familiar dialogue essential to comedy . However , where it cannot support a sublimity , it always preserves a dignity or at least a ...
Sisältö
Preface to the Works of 1717 | 23 |
From Popes Correspondence | 29 |
Of the Art of Sinking in Poetry | 43 |
Tekijänoikeudet | |
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Achilles admire Aeneid Alexander Pope Ambrose Philips Ancients appear Aristotle Bathos beauty Ben Jonson Blackmore Book character Corr diction Double Falsehood Dryden eclogues edition English epic poetry Essay on Criticism example excellent expression fable fancy faults figures genius give gods greatest hath Hector hero Homer honor Horace ideas Iliad images imagination imitation invention judge judgment justice kind language learning less literary Longinus manner means method modern moral Nature neoclassical neoclassicism never numbers observe occasion Odyssey painting particular passages passions Pastoral Poetry Peri Bathous persons Philips piece plain poet poetical Pope Pope's praise Preface Prince Arthur principal Profund reader reason remarks ridiculous rules satire scenes seems sense Shakespeare similes simplicity sometimes sort speeches spirit style sublime taste Theocritus things Thomas Tickell thought tion tradition translation true verse Virgil whole words writing