AddisonHarper, 1902 - 182 pagina's |
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Pagina 12
... feelings is best shown by discover- ing resemblances between his mistress and those objects in nature to which she is ... feeling was not acquired till he had invested himself with the pastoral at- tributes of Damon and Celadon , and had ...
... feelings is best shown by discover- ing resemblances between his mistress and those objects in nature to which she is ... feeling was not acquired till he had invested himself with the pastoral at- tributes of Damon and Celadon , and had ...
Pagina 13
... feeling . The heroes tear their passion to tatters because they think it heroic to do so ; their flights into the sublime generally drop into the ridiculous ; instead of holding up the mirror to nature , their object is to de- part as ...
... feeling . The heroes tear their passion to tatters because they think it heroic to do so ; their flights into the sublime generally drop into the ridiculous ; instead of holding up the mirror to nature , their object is to de- part as ...
Pagina 93
... feeling which is here described , and which was the cause of so many of Steele's failings in real life , made him the most powerful and persuasive advocate of Virtue in fiction . Of all the imaginative English essayists he is the most ...
... feeling which is here described , and which was the cause of so many of Steele's failings in real life , made him the most powerful and persuasive advocate of Virtue in fiction . Of all the imaginative English essayists he is the most ...
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
acquaintance acted Addi Addison admirable afterwards Ambrose Philips appear audience Cato character Charles II Club coffee-houses Countess of Warwick Court criticism Dennis described doubt drama Dryden Dunciad endeavour England English Essay fashion favour feeling fortunes French genius gentleman Halifax honour humour Ibid Iliad imagination Jacob Tonson kind King Kit-Kat Club Latin letter lion literary literature live look Lord Lord Halifax Lord Warwick manners Marlborough ment Milston mind moral nation nature never Ovid Oxford paper party period person play pleasure poem poet poetry political Pope Pope's praise principles published Puritan Queen reader reason Roger de Coverley satire says scarcely scenes seems sense sentiment Sir Roger society Spectator Spence Spence's Anecdotes spirit stage Steele Steele's style Swift Syphax taste Tatler tator thought Tickell Tickell's tion Tonson Tory tragedy translation verses virtue Whig words writes written wrote