Selected WorksRinehart, 1953 - 424 sivua |
Kirjan sisältä
Tulokset 1 - 3 kokonaismäärästä 38
Sivu 149
... truth , Alexas ; whether it offend Or please Ventidius , care not : Justify Thy injured queen from malice : Dare his worst . OCTAVIA . [ Aside . ] See how he gives him courage ! how he fears To find her false ! and shuts his eyes to truth ...
... truth , Alexas ; whether it offend Or please Ventidius , care not : Justify Thy injured queen from malice : Dare his worst . OCTAVIA . [ Aside . ] See how he gives him courage ! how he fears To find her false ! and shuts his eyes to truth ...
Sivu 240
... truth , but probability . Even Arius and Pelagius durst provoke To what the centuries preceding spoke . Such difference is there in an oft - told tale ; But truth by its own sinews will prevail . Tradition written therefore more ...
... truth , but probability . Even Arius and Pelagius durst provoke To what the centuries preceding spoke . Such difference is there in an oft - told tale ; But truth by its own sinews will prevail . Tradition written therefore more ...
Sivu 347
... truth , or at least verisimility ; and a poem is to contain , if not tà etuua [ the truth ] , yet éτúpotov opoia [ what seems to be true ] , as one of the Greek poets has expressed it . " Another thing in which the French differ from us ...
... truth , or at least verisimility ; and a poem is to contain , if not tà etuua [ the truth ] , yet éτúpotov opoia [ what seems to be true ] , as one of the Greek poets has expressed it . " Another thing in which the French differ from us ...
Muita painoksia - Näytä kaikki
Yleiset termit ja lausekkeet
Absalom and Achitophel Aeneid ALEXAS ancient Anne Killigrew ANTONY Aristotle audience bear beauty Ben Jonson betwixt blank verse Boccace Caesar Canterbury Tales CHARMION Chaucer Church CLEOPATRA comedy Crites dare death DOLABELLA Dryden English EPILOGUE Eugenius ev'n ev'ry eyes fame fate father fear Fletcher foes French give grace haste Heaven honour Horace humour IRAS Jebusites John Dryden Jonson judge kind king leave Lisideius live look lord lost lovers Mac Flecknoe mistress Muse nature never numbers o'er OCTAVIA Ovid pains passion peace persons plain play plot poem poesy poet poetry pow'r praise priests PROLOGUE queen reason rhyme Roman Rome ruin satire scene SERAPION Shakespeare sigh sight Silent Woman soul speak stage sweet thee things thou thought thro tion tragedies translated truth VENTIDIUS Virgil words writ write youth