The Poems of John Dryden: 1693-1696Longman, 1995 - 402 sivua Volume Four covers poems published between 1693 and 1696, principally Dryden's translations from Juvenal and Persius, and those from Ovid and Homer included in the miscellany Examen Poeticum (1693). This new edition represents the most informative and accessible edition of Dryden's poetry, incorporating extensive new research and providing an invaluable resource for all those interested in English poetry and Restoration culture. |
Kirjan sisältä
Tulokset 1 - 3 kokonaismäärästä 47
Sivu 43
... seems to have been strictly limited , they are here printed in the notes rather than in the main text : see notes after ll . 177 , 285 , 335-6 , 427 , 435 , 437 , 450. Since the transcription of the additional lines in 1693 ( Y ) ...
... seems to have been strictly limited , they are here printed in the notes rather than in the main text : see notes after ll . 177 , 285 , 335-6 , 427 , 435 , 437 , 450. Since the transcription of the additional lines in 1693 ( Y ) ...
Sivu 97
... seems to have been most significantly influenced by that of Higden , for which he had written a commendatory poem in 1687. Despite its occasional trivializ- ing tendencies ( it is in octosyllabics , and contains several passages the ...
... seems to have been most significantly influenced by that of Higden , for which he had written a commendatory poem in 1687. Despite its occasional trivializ- ing tendencies ( it is in octosyllabics , and contains several passages the ...
Sivu 211
... seems to bark than sing ! Would any but a dog have made so snarling a comparison ? One would have thought he had learned Latin as late as they tell us he did Greek . Yet he came off with a pace tua , by your good leave , Lucan ; he ...
... seems to bark than sing ! Would any but a dog have made so snarling a comparison ? One would have thought he had learned Latin as late as they tell us he did Greek . Yet he came off with a pace tua , by your good leave , Lucan ; he ...
Sisältö
The First Satire of Juvenal | 3 |
The Third Satire of Juvenal | 19 |
The Sixth Satire of Juvenal | 43 |
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Andromache Aulus Persius Flaccus citing this example commentators Congreve Crispinus D.'s addition D.'s expansion D.'s note D.'s substitution Date and publication David Hopkins death Dedication Discourse Concerning Satire earth edited English Epilogue Ev'n expansion of Ovid's eyes fate father fear gloss gods Golding grace Greek headnote heaven Hector Henninius Henry Purcell Higden Holyday Homer honour Horace husband Iliad J. R. Mason John Dryden Jove King Kneller Latin lines living Lord Metamorphoses Milton Miscellany Nero numbers Oldham omits Juvenal's reference Ovid Ovid's Oxford Paul Hammond play poem poet praise Prateus Prateus and Schrevelius Prologue published Purcell rhyme Roman Rome Rymer Sandys Satire of Juvenal Satire of Persius says Schrevelius Sejanus seventeenth-century Shadwell Sixth Satire Song Sowerby Stapylton substitution for Juvenal's substitution for Ovid's Theatre thee Thomas Yalden thou Tonson translation verse Virgil wife William William Congreve Winn