The Best of DrydenRonald Press, 1933 - 572 sivua |
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Sivu 489
... translated as he ought , in any modern tongue . To make him copious , is to alter his character ; and to translate him line for line is impossible ; because the Latin is naturally a more 210 succinct language than either the Italian ...
... translated as he ought , in any modern tongue . To make him copious , is to alter his character ; and to translate him line for line is impossible ; because the Latin is naturally a more 210 succinct language than either the Italian ...
Sivu 494
... translated it , than why I thus translated it . The objection arises from the obscenity of the subject ; which is aggra- vated by the too lively and alluring delicacy of the verses . In the first place , without the least formality of ...
... translated it , than why I thus translated it . The objection arises from the obscenity of the subject ; which is aggra- vated by the too lively and alluring delicacy of the verses . In the first place , without the least formality of ...
Sivu 524
... translated into the old Provençal ( for , how she should come to 810 understand Old English , I know not ) . But the mat- ter of fact being true , it makes me think , that there is something in it like fatality ; that , after certain ...
... translated into the old Provençal ( for , how she should come to 810 understand Old English , I know not ) . But the mat- ter of fact being true , it makes me think , that there is something in it like fatality ; that , after certain ...
Sisältö
PREFACE | ix |
UPON THE Death of the LORD HASTINGS I | 4 |
TO MY HONORD FRIEND SIR ROBERT HOWARD II | 11 |
Tekijänoikeudet | |
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Absalom and Achitophel Achitophel Æneid ancient Aristotle beauties Ben Jonson betwixt blank verse blood bold cause Chaucer Church comedies command Creüsa Crites death design'd Dramatic Poesy Dryden Duke of Lerma English ev'n ev'ry eyes faith fame fate father fear fight fire foes forc'd French friends give grace Grecian hand haste Heav'n Hind Horace imitation int'rest Jebusites John Dryden Jonson judge judgment kind king laws Lisideius live Lord lov'd Lucretius Mac Flecknoe mind Muse nature never noble numbers o'er Ovid Panther passion persons play plot poem poet poetry pow'r praise prince prose reason Religio Laici religion rest rhyme sacred satire scenes seem'd Sejanus sense sight Silent Woman soul thee things thou thought thro tion tragedies translation true truth verse Virgil virtue Whig wind words writ write youth