Literary Criticism of Seventeenth-century EnglandEdward W. Tayler Knopf, 1967 - 427 pagina's |
Vanuit het boek
Resultaten 1-3 van 50
Pagina 50
... delight , which , Custome intertaining by the allowance of the Eare , doth indenize , and make naturall . All verse is but a frame of wordes confinde within certaine measure ; differing from the ordinarie speach , and introduced , the ...
... delight , which , Custome intertaining by the allowance of the Eare , doth indenize , and make naturall . All verse is but a frame of wordes confinde within certaine measure ; differing from the ordinarie speach , and introduced , the ...
Pagina 139
... delight , and teach ; the Comicks are call'd didáσkaλo , 2 of the Greekes ; no lesse then the Tragicks . Nor , is the moving of laughter alwaies the end of Comedy , that is rather a fowling for the peoples delight , or their fooling ...
... delight , and teach ; the Comicks are call'd didáσkaλo , 2 of the Greekes ; no lesse then the Tragicks . Nor , is the moving of laughter alwaies the end of Comedy , that is rather a fowling for the peoples delight , or their fooling ...
Pagina 212
... delight it : where as contrar- ily , discords continually jarre , and fight together , and will not mingle with one another : but all of them striving to have the victory , their reluctation and disorder gives a speedie end to their ...
... delight it : where as contrar- ily , discords continually jarre , and fight together , and will not mingle with one another : but all of them striving to have the victory , their reluctation and disorder gives a speedie end to their ...
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
admirable Aeneid affected alwayes ancient Aristotle Author better body Book call'd Cicero conceit delight discourse divine Donne doth Dryden eare eloquence English Epigrams Euripides excellent expression Fable fame Fancy farre fitnesse Francis Bacon generall Gods Gondibert grace Greeke hath Homer honour Horace Iliads imitate invention Jonson Joshua Sylvester judgement kind knowledge labour language Latin learned lesse lines literary criticism manner matter meane meere Metaphysical Poetry mind Muse naturall Nature neoclassical never noble Orpheus Ovid perfect Petrarch Philosophers Plato Plautus Poem Poesie poetic Poetry Poets praise prose Quintilian Reader reason Renaissance Rime Ryme Samuel Daniel sayes selfe Seneca sense severall shew Sophocles soule speake spirit stile style thee thereof things thinke thou thought tion tongue Tragedy translation true Truth verse vertue Virgil vulgar wayes wherein wisdome wise words writ write Zoroaster