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 29
Sivu 34
... fall , Or to be caught betwixt a riven wall ? But we inhabit a weak city here , 315 320 Which buttresses and props but scarcely bear : And ' tis the village mason's daily calling To keep the world's metropolis from falling ; To cleanse ...
... fall , Or to be caught betwixt a riven wall ? But we inhabit a weak city here , 315 320 Which buttresses and props but scarcely bear : And ' tis the village mason's daily calling To keep the world's metropolis from falling ; To cleanse ...
Sivu 109
... fall beget , And ruined him who , greater than the great , The stubborn pride of Roman nobles broke , And bent their haughty necks beneath his yoke ? What else but his immoderate lust of power , Prayers made and granted in a luckless ...
... fall beget , And ruined him who , greater than the great , The stubborn pride of Roman nobles broke , And bent their haughty necks beneath his yoke ? What else but his immoderate lust of power , Prayers made and granted in a luckless ...
Sivu 111
... fall'n beaver loosely hanging by The cloven helm ; an arch of victory , On whose high convex sits a captive foe , 200. theatres ] Holyday argues that the reference is to those meetings of the Athe- nian assembly which were held in the ...
... fall'n beaver loosely hanging by The cloven helm ; an arch of victory , On whose high convex sits a captive foe , 200. theatres ] Holyday argues that the reference is to those meetings of the Athe- nian assembly which were held in the ...
Sisältö
The First Satire of Juvenal | 3 |
The Third Satire of Juvenal | 19 |
The Sixth Satire of Juvenal | 43 |
Tekijänoikeudet | |
22 muita osia ei näytetty
Muita painoksia - Näytä kaikki
Yleiset termit ja lausekkeet
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 fame 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