Bell's Edition, Niteet 29–30J. Bell, 1776 |
Kirjan sisältä
Tulokset 1 - 5 kokonaismäärästä 51
Sivu 17
... never any was known to aspire to emulation : even the late ingenious Mr. Philips , who , in the colours of style , came the nearest of all the copiers to resemble the great original , made his distant advances with a filial reverence ...
... never any was known to aspire to emulation : even the late ingenious Mr. Philips , who , in the colours of style , came the nearest of all the copiers to resemble the great original , made his distant advances with a filial reverence ...
Sivu 24
... never been legible fince he was employed in that office , which he has poffeffed about forty years . This , fure , could never have happened in fo fhort a space of time , unless the Epitaph had been induftrously erased ; and that fup ...
... never been legible fince he was employed in that office , which he has poffeffed about forty years . This , fure , could never have happened in fo fhort a space of time , unless the Epitaph had been induftrously erased ; and that fup ...
Sivu 37
... never were any more nicely imagined , and employed in more proper actions , than those of which I am now speak- ing . Another principal actor in this Poem is the great enemy of mankind . The part of Ulyffes in Homer's Odyssey is very ...
... never were any more nicely imagined , and employed in more proper actions , than those of which I am now speak- ing . Another principal actor in this Poem is the great enemy of mankind . The part of Ulyffes in Homer's Odyssey is very ...
Sivu 49
... never hear them pronounced in our streets , or in ordinary conversation . It is not therefore fufficient that the Language of an epic poem be perfpicuous , unless it be alfo fublime . To this end it ought to deviate from the common ...
... never hear them pronounced in our streets , or in ordinary conversation . It is not therefore fufficient that the Language of an epic poem be perfpicuous , unless it be alfo fublime . To this end it ought to deviate from the common ...
Sivu 50
... never clash with one another , which , as Aristotle obferves , turns a sentence into a kind of enigma or riddle ; and that he feldom has recourfe to them where the proper and natural words will do as well . Another way of raifing the ...
... never clash with one another , which , as Aristotle obferves , turns a sentence into a kind of enigma or riddle ; and that he feldom has recourfe to them where the proper and natural words will do as well . Another way of raifing the ...
Yleiset termit ja lausekkeet
Adam Adam and Eve Æneid againſt alſo angels appear'd arm'd arms beast becauſe behold beſt bright call'd cherubim cloud creatures dark darkneſs death deep delight divine dreadful dwell eternal evil eyes Fable faid fair fame Father fhall fight fince fire firſt fome fons foon foul fpirits fruit fuch gate glory gods grace hand happy hast hath Heav'n heav'nly Hell hill himſelf Iliad JOHN MILTON JOSEPH ADDISON King laſt lefs leſs light live loft mankind Milton moſt muſt night o'er obferved pain Paradise PARADISE LOST peace pleas'd poem poet praiſe purſued rais'd reign reply'd return'd round Satan seem'd serpent ſeveral ſhall ſhape ſhould spake Spi'rit ſtand ſtate ſtill ſtood ſuch ſweet taſte thee thence theſe thine things thither thoſe thou thoughts throne tree turn'd uſe vex'd Virgil wand'ring whence whofe whoſe wings worſe