Literary Criticism of John DrydenUniversity of Nebraska Press, 1967 - 174 sivua |
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Tulokset 1 - 3 kokonaismäärästä 55
Sivu 75
... writing.6 Thus prose , though the rightful prince , yet is by common consent deposed as too weak for the government ... written in it ; which , though it be no demonstration that therefore they ought to be so , yet at least the practice ...
... writing.6 Thus prose , though the rightful prince , yet is by common consent deposed as too weak for the government ... written in it ; which , though it be no demonstration that therefore they ought to be so , yet at least the practice ...
Sivu 93
... written : and , if I find my own errors in it , I am able at the same time to arraign all my contemporaries for greater . As I pretend not that I can write humour , so none of them can reasonably pretend to have written it as they ought ...
... written : and , if I find my own errors in it , I am able at the same time to arraign all my contemporaries for greater . As I pretend not that I can write humour , so none of them can reasonably pretend to have written it as they ought ...
Sivu 125
... written by one Lollius , a Lombard , in Latin verse , and translated by Chaucer into English ; intended , I suppose , a satire on the inconstancy of women : I find nothing of it among the Ancients ; not so much as the name Cressida once ...
... written by one Lollius , a Lombard , in Latin verse , and translated by Chaucer into English ; intended , I suppose , a satire on the inconstancy of women : I find nothing of it among the Ancients ; not so much as the name Cressida once ...
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 |
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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