Poems, Nide 4Clarendon Press, 1958 - 2104 sivua |
Kirjan sisältä
Tulokset 1 - 3 kokonaismäärästä 68
Sivu 1873
... says in his Preface that he did not venture to send the play ' forth into the World , until it had past the Censures of some ( I may say ) the greatest part of the Witty and Judicious Men of the Town ; untill it had receiv'd some Rules ...
... says in his Preface that he did not venture to send the play ' forth into the World , until it had past the Censures of some ( I may say ) the greatest part of the Witty and Judicious Men of the Town ; untill it had receiv'd some Rules ...
Sivu 2004
... say , The breath goes now , and some say , no . . . . 339. the third Errand . The others had been for Enoch ( Gen. v ... says Dryden in his Preface , the reasons ' were so ill founded , that my Lord Chamberlain no sooner took the pains ...
... say , The breath goes now , and some say , no . . . . 339. the third Errand . The others had been for Enoch ( Gen. v ... says Dryden in his Preface , the reasons ' were so ill founded , that my Lord Chamberlain no sooner took the pains ...
Sivu 2011
... says Casaubon . Casaubon does not derive ' silli ' from ' Silenus ' ; but there is in the 1605 edition ( p . 286 ) a misprint ' Silenorum Xenophanis ' for ' Sillorum Xenophanis ' which may have misled Dryden in careless reading . The ...
... says Casaubon . Casaubon does not derive ' silli ' from ' Silenus ' ; but there is in the 1605 edition ( p . 286 ) a misprint ' Silenorum Xenophanis ' for ' Sillorum Xenophanis ' which may have misled Dryden in careless reading . The ...
Sisältö
FABLES ANCIENT AND MODERN TRANSLATED INTO | 1437 |
To Her Grace the Dutchess of Ormond | 1463 |
To my Honourd Kinsman John Driden of Chesterton | 1529 |
21 muita osia ei näytetty
Muita painoksia - Näytä kaikki
Yleiset termit ja lausekkeet
Absalom and Achitophel Æneis Annus Mirabilis Arcite Arms betwixt Blood Book Breast Burnet call'd Charles Chaucer cou'd Court cry'd Cymon Dame Death Dedication Diary Dryden Duke Duke of Guise e'er Earl edition Epilogue and Songs Epistle Ev'n ev'ry Evelyn Eyes Fables Faerie Queene Fair Fate fear Fight Fire Flames Friend Georgics Grace Hand Heart Heav'n Hind Honour Horace Jove Juvenal King Lady Lord lov'd Love Lover Lucretius Mac Flecknoe Macdonald Maid Marriage A-la-Mode Mind Miscellany Poems Name never Night o'er Ovid Ovid's Palamon Panther Pepys Persius plac'd play pleas'd Poet Poetry Pow'r Pray'r Preface Prince Prologue Prologue and Epilogue Pseudodoxia Epidemica publick Queen Royal Satires of Juvenalis Satyr says Scott seem'd Shadwell shou'd Sight Sire Soul stood supra thee Theseus Things thou thought Tonson translation Troilus and Cressida turn'd Verse Virgil Whigs Words wou'd