Neo-classical Criticism, 1660-1800Ir醗ne·Simon University of South Carolina Press, 1971 - 224 sivua |
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Tulokset 1 - 3 kokonaismäärästä 52
Sivu 73
... manners of future generations , as a being superior to time and place . " [ pp . 62-3 . ] SAMUEL JOHNSON , Preface to The Plays of William Shakespeare ( 1765 ) Nothing can please many , and please long , but just representations of ...
... manners of future generations , as a being superior to time and place . " [ pp . 62-3 . ] SAMUEL JOHNSON , Preface to The Plays of William Shakespeare ( 1765 ) Nothing can please many , and please long , but just representations of ...
Sivu 140
... manners of a king . The third property of manners is resemblance ; and this is founded upon the particular characters of men , as we have them delivered to us by relation or history ; that is , when a poet has the known character of ...
... manners of a king . The third property of manners is resemblance ; and this is founded upon the particular characters of men , as we have them delivered to us by relation or history ; that is , when a poet has the known character of ...
Sivu 158
... manner of relating them . I resolved to consider the first of these , and to prove that the poetical persons ought to have manners , and that those manners ought to have the following qualifications : that they ought to be good ...
... manner of relating them . I resolved to consider the first of these , and to prove that the poetical persons ought to have manners , and that those manners ought to have the following qualifications : that they ought to be good ...
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action admiration Aeneid ALEXANDER POPE ancients appear Aristotle audience beauty Boileau characters comedy common composition delight Discourse divine end of poetry endeavour English epic poem epic poetry Essay of Dramatic Essay on Criticism excellence expression fable fancy faults fiction genius genre give Gondibert greater Homer Horace human humour imagination imitation of nature instruction invention JOHN DENNIS JOHN DRYDEN JOSEPH ADDISON judge judgment kind language learning Lisideius mankind manners mind moderns moral neo-classical neo-classical criticism neo-classicists never objects observed opinion particular passions perfect persons play pleased pleasure poet poetic justice poetical Preface principles proper propriety reader reason rhyme ridiculous rules Rymer Samson Agonistes SAMUEL JOHNSON satire sense sentiments Shakespeare shew Spectator stage style sublime taste things THOMAS RYMER thought tion tragedy Troilus and Cressida true truth unity variety verse Virgil virtue words writing