Literary Criticism of Alexander PopeUniversity of Nebraska Press, 1965 - 181 sivua |
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Tulokset 1 - 3 kokonaismäärästä 59
Sivu 27
... thought tolerable . I would not be like those authors who forgive themselves some particular lines for the sake of a whole poem and vice versa a whole poem for the sake of some particular lines . I believe no one qualification is so ...
... thought tolerable . I would not be like those authors who forgive themselves some particular lines for the sake of a whole poem and vice versa a whole poem for the sake of some particular lines . I believe no one qualification is so ...
Sivu 56
... thought alone and the variety of imagina- tion that charm and surprise us . And when the same lady goes into the bath , the thought ( as in justness it ought ) goes still deeper : Venus beheld her , ' midst her crowd of slaves , And thought ...
... thought alone and the variety of imagina- tion that charm and surprise us . And when the same lady goes into the bath , the thought ( as in justness it ought ) goes still deeper : Venus beheld her , ' midst her crowd of slaves , And thought ...
Sivu 165
... thought a praise to Shakespeare that he scarce ever " blotted a line . " This they industriously propagated , as appears from what we are told by Ben Jonson in his Discov- eries and from the preface of Heminges and Condell1 to the first ...
... thought a praise to Shakespeare that he scarce ever " blotted a line . " This they industriously propagated , as appears from what we are told by Ben Jonson in his Discov- eries and from the preface of Heminges and Condell1 to the first ...
Sisältö
Preface to the Works of 1717 | 23 |
From Popes Correspondence | 29 |
Of the Art of Sinking in Poetry | 43 |
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action admire allowed Ancients appear Bathos beauty better Book character circumstances common considered criticism edition English epic Essay example excellent expression figures force genius give given greater greatest hand hath head Homer honor ideas Iliad images imagination imitation invention judge judgment kind language learning least less lines live look manner means method mind moral names Nature never numbers object observe occasion Odyssey once original particular passages pastoral persons Philips piece plain plays pleased poem poet poetical poetry Pope Pope's practice praise present Press principal proper raise reader reason remarks rise rules seems sense Shakespeare short simplicity sometimes sort speak speeches spirit style sublime taken taste things thought tion translation true turn University verse Virgil whole writing