Reviews, Essays, and PoemsWard, Lock, 1899 - 661 pagina's |
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Pagina 322
... spirit of the old romances , enriched with much splendid description , and interspersed with fine declamations and disquisitions . The danger of Dryden would have been from aiming too high ; from dwelling too much , for example , on his ...
... spirit of the old romances , enriched with much splendid description , and interspersed with fine declamations and disquisitions . The danger of Dryden would have been from aiming too high ; from dwelling too much , for example , on his ...
Pagina 336
... spirit excited by these writers pro- duced more serious effects . The greater part of the crimes which dis- graced the revolution , sprung indeed from the relaxation of law , from popular ignorance , from the remembrance of past ...
... spirit excited by these writers pro- duced more serious effects . The greater part of the crimes which dis- graced the revolution , sprung indeed from the relaxation of law , from popular ignorance , from the remembrance of past ...
Pagina 452
... spirit in which it is written with the spirit which pervades the rest of the French literature of that age , we shall perceive that , though in appearance trite , it was in truth one of the most original works that have ever appeared ...
... spirit in which it is written with the spirit which pervades the rest of the French literature of that age , we shall perceive that , though in appearance trite , it was in truth one of the most original works that have ever appeared ...
Inhoudsopgave
The Poetical Works of JOHN DRYDEN 2 vols University | 293 |
UTILITARIAN LOGIC AND POLITICS | 352 |
BENTHAMS DEFENCE OF MILL | 377 |
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absurd admiration Alcibiades ancient appears argument aristocracy Aristophanes Athenian Athens average fecundity Bentham Cæsar character constitution Dante Demosthenes departments of France desire despotism Divine Comedy doctrines Dryden effect England English equal Euripides evil exist fact favour fear fecundity feelings France French French Revolution genius greatest happiness principle Greek Herodotus historians honour human nature imagination imitated inhabitants interest king language less liberty literature Lord mankind manner marriages means Mill Mill's mind Mitford monarchy moral nation never noble object opinion oppressed Parliament passions person Petrarch philosopher pleasure plunder poem poet poetry political population possess produced prove question readers reason respect Revolution rich Sadler scarcely seems slaves society sophism sovereign Speusippus spirit square mile superfecundity taste tells theory thing Thucydides tion truth Utilitarian Westminster Reviewer whole words writers