Literary Criticism of John DrydenUniversity of Nebraska Press, 1967 - 174 sivua |
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Tulokset 1 - 3 kokonaismäärästä 31
Sivu 24
... true , no poet but may sometimes use a catachresis ; Virgil does it : ... shall pour forth the Egyptian bean blended with the smiling acanthus , 36 in his eclogue of Pollio ; and in his 7th Eneid , The very waves and unaccustomed woods ...
... true , no poet but may sometimes use a catachresis ; Virgil does it : ... shall pour forth the Egyptian bean blended with the smiling acanthus , 36 in his eclogue of Pollio ; and in his 7th Eneid , The very waves and unaccustomed woods ...
Sivu 92
... true physician : both of them may attain their ends ; but what the one performs by hazard , the other does by skill . And as the artist is often unsuccessful while the mountebank succeeds ; so farces more commonly take the people than ...
... true physician : both of them may attain their ends ; but what the one performs by hazard , the other does by skill . And as the artist is often unsuccessful while the mountebank succeeds ; so farces more commonly take the people than ...
Sivu 117
... true definition of tragedy , it will be found that its work extends farther , and that it is to reform manners by delightful representation of human life in great persons , by way of dialogue . If this be true , then not only pity and ...
... true definition of tragedy , it will be found that its work extends farther , and that it is to reform manners by delightful representation of human life in great persons , by way of dialogue . If this be true , then not only pity and ...
Sisältö
A Defence of An Essay of Dramatic Poesy 1668 | 70 |
Preface to An Evenings Love 1671 | 90 |
Heads of an Answer to Rymer 1677 | 115 |
Tekijänoikeudet | |
2 muita osia ei näytetty
Muita painoksia - Näytä kaikki
Yleiset termit ja lausekkeet
acknowledge action admire allowed already Ancients answer appear argument Aristotle audience beauties beginning better betwixt called cause characters Chaucer comedy compass concernment conclude Corneille criticism defend delight discourse Dryden English equal errors Essay example excellent expression faults Fletcher follow French give given greater greatest Greek Homer humour imagination imitation Jonson judge judgment kind language latter least leave less lines lived manners means move nature never observed occasion opinion passions perfection perhaps persons pity Plautus play pleased plot poem poesy poet poetry practice preface present probability produce proper prove raised reader reason relation represented rest rhyme rule scene sense serious Shakespeare sometimes speak stage story supposed tell things thoughts tragedy translated true verse Virgil virtue whole wholly writ write written