English Literary Criticism: Restoration and 18th CenturyAppleton-Century-Crofts, 1963 - 322 sivua |
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Sivu 204
... hath remarked that villany is not its object : but he hath not , as I remember , positively asserted what is . Nor doth the Abbé Belle- garde , who hath writ a treatise on this subject , tho ' he shews us many species of it , once trace ...
... hath remarked that villany is not its object : but he hath not , as I remember , positively asserted what is . Nor doth the Abbé Belle- garde , who hath writ a treatise on this subject , tho ' he shews us many species of it , once trace ...
Sivu 210
... Hath any commentator well accounted for the limitation which an ancient critic hath set to the drama , which he will have contain neither more nor less than five acts ? Or hath any one living at- tempted to explain , what the modern ...
... Hath any commentator well accounted for the limitation which an ancient critic hath set to the drama , which he will have contain neither more nor less than five acts ? Or hath any one living at- tempted to explain , what the modern ...
Sivu 230
... hath nobly touched this vice , when he says- ' Who steals my purse steals trash , ' tis something , nothing ; ' Twas mine , ' tis his , and hath been slave to thousands : But he that filches from me my good name Robs me of that WHICH ...
... hath nobly touched this vice , when he says- ' Who steals my purse steals trash , ' tis something , nothing ; ' Twas mine , ' tis his , and hath been slave to thousands : But he that filches from me my good name Robs me of that WHICH ...
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action admiration Aeneid affected Ancients appear Aristotle Audience Author beauty Ben Johnson blank verse Character Chaucer Comedy common Crites critical delight Discourse Dryden endeavour English entertainment essays Eugenius excellent fancy farther faults fiction French G. A. Aitken genius give hath Homer Horace human Humour idea images imagination imitation Jeremy Collier John Dryden Johnson judge judgment kind Lady Language learning Lisideius Lord Foplington Love mankind manner matter mind modern moral nature neo-classical never numbers objects observ'd observed opinion Ovid pain painter painting Paradise Lost passions pastoral perfect perhaps persons Plautus Play Playes pleasure Plot poem Poesie Poet poetry praise principles Provok'd Wife reader reason Rhyme ridiculous rules Scene sense sentiments shew Silent Woman speak Stage sublime taste Theocritus things thought tion tragedy true truth Vice Virgil virtue Walter Jackson Bate words writ writing