Timber; Or, DiscoveriesSyracuse University Press, 1953 - 135 pagina's |
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Pagina 32
Ben Jonson Ralph Spence Walker. ter way to happiness than to live the emperor of these delights and be the dictator ... lives , when even it appeared as superfluous to the possessors as to me that was a spectator ? The bravery was shown ...
Ben Jonson Ralph Spence Walker. ter way to happiness than to live the emperor of these delights and be the dictator ... lives , when even it appeared as superfluous to the possessors as to me that was a spectator ? The bravery was shown ...
Pagina 43
... live after the manners of the vulgar ; but that I call custom of speech which is the consent of the Lw Virgil was most loving of antiquity , yet how rarely doth he insert aquai and pictai ! 17 Lucretius is scabrous and rough in these ...
... live after the manners of the vulgar ; but that I call custom of speech which is the consent of the Lw Virgil was most loving of antiquity , yet how rarely doth he insert aquai and pictai ! 17 Lucretius is scabrous and rough in these ...
Pagina 123
... live in our minds half - independent of his works : for we are concerned here , not with the considered thoughts of a writer communicating with the world in general and posterity , but with casual talk spoken by one man who had no ...
... live in our minds half - independent of his works : for we are concerned here , not with the considered thoughts of a writer communicating with the world in general and posterity , but with casual talk spoken by one man who had no ...
Inhoudsopgave
INTRODUCTION | 1 |
Essays | 19 |
BEN JONSONS LYRIC POETRY | 106 |
Copyright | |
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Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
6th century action affectation Algernon Charles Swinburne appear Aristotle Bacon beauty Ben Jonson better called century B.C. Cicero classical comedy conception confess Controv Conversations with Drummond counsel creatures critical Cynthia's Revels Daniel Heinsius diligence Discoveries disease Donne doth edition Elizabethan eloquence English envy Epig Epist essay Euripides excellent express fable favour feign Folio fool grace Greek Gregory Smith hath Herford honour Horace ideal imitation invention Israel Gollancz Jonson Jonson's lyric judge judgment Justus Lipsius Juvenal kind labour language Latin learning less Lines literary lyric poetry matter men's ment mind moral nature never Orat passage perfect person Plautus Plutarch poem poesy poet poetical poetry praise Prince Quintilian reader romantic saith Seneca sense sentences speak speech style talk things thought tion truth utter verse vice virtue Vives whole words writing