Lives of the English Poets, Volume 1Gateway Editions, 1955 - 400 pagina's |
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Pagina 78
... wrote Tyrannic Love , and the State of Innocence , he soon obtained the full effect of diligence , and added facility to exactness . Rhyme has been so long banished from the theatre , that we know not its effects upon the passions of an ...
... wrote Tyrannic Love , and the State of Innocence , he soon obtained the full effect of diligence , and added facility to exactness . Rhyme has been so long banished from the theatre , that we know not its effects upon the passions of an ...
Pagina 180
... wrote indeed with a double intention which supplied him with some variety ; for his business was to praise the Queen for the favours which he had received , and to complain to her of the delay of those which she had promised : in some ...
... wrote indeed with a double intention which supplied him with some variety ; for his business was to praise the Queen for the favours which he had received , and to complain to her of the delay of those which she had promised : in some ...
Pagina 239
... wrote some other small pieces which he afterwards printed . He sometimes imitated the English poets , and professed to have written at fourteen his poem upon Silence , after Rochester's Nothing . He had now formed his versification ...
... wrote some other small pieces which he afterwards printed . He sometimes imitated the English poets , and professed to have written at fourteen his poem upon Silence , after Rochester's Nothing . He had now formed his versification ...
Inhoudsopgave
From The Life of Abraham Cowley | 1 |
From The Life of John Milton 16081674 | 21 |
From The Life of John Dryden 16311700 | 43 |
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Absalom and Achitophel acquaintance Addison Æneid afterwards allowed appeared Atrides beauties Bolingbroke censure character Cibber confessed considered contempt COWLEY criticism death declared delighted diction dignity diligence discovered DONNE Dryden Dunciad easily effect elegance endeavoured English English poetry Essay Essay on Criticism excellence faults favour fortune friends genius Georgics happy Homer honour human Iliad images imagination Johnson kind knowledge labour language learning letter likewise lines literary live Lord Bolingbroke Lord Halifax Lord Tyrconnel Lycidas mankind ment mind mother nature neglected never numbers o'er observed opinion Ovid panegyric Paradise Lost passion performance perhaps pleasing pleasure poem poet poetical poetry Pope Pope's praise published Queen reader reason remarks reputation resentment Richard Savage satire Savage says seems sentiments Sir Robert Walpole solicited sometimes stanza subscription sufficient supposed thought tion translation truth verses Virgil virtue write written wrote