Lives of the English Poets, Volume 2Oxford University Press, 1933 |
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Pagina 51
... elegance of diction : it has either been written with great care , er , what cannot be imagined of so long a work ... elegance , and elegance sustained by truth . In the structure and order of the poem , not only the greater parts are ...
... elegance of diction : it has either been written with great care , er , what cannot be imagined of so long a work ... elegance , and elegance sustained by truth . In the structure and order of the poem , not only the greater parts are ...
Pagina 336
... elegance . One refinement always makes way for another , and what was expedient to Virgil was necessary to Pope . I suppose many readers of the English Iliad , when they have been touched with some unexpected beauty of the lighter kind ...
... elegance . One refinement always makes way for another , and what was expedient to Virgil was necessary to Pope . I suppose many readers of the English Iliad , when they have been touched with some unexpected beauty of the lighter kind ...
Pagina 362
... elegance ; and , at his removal to New College in 1719 , presented to the electors , as the product of his private and voluntary studies , a compleat version of Lucan's poem , which he did not then know to have been translated by Rowe ...
... elegance ; and , at his removal to New College in 1719 , presented to the electors , as the product of his private and voluntary studies , a compleat version of Lucan's poem , which he did not then know to have been translated by Rowe ...
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
Aaron Hill acquaintance Addison afterwards appeared Atrides blank verse Bolingbroke censure character Cibber considered contempt conversation criticism death declared delight deserved diction diligence discovered Dryden Dunciad edition elegance endeavoured English epitaph Essay excellence expected expence faults favour Fenton fortune friends friendship genius Homer honour Iliad imagination judgement kind King known labour Lady learning Letters lines lived Lord Bolingbroke Lord Halifax Lord Tyrconnel mankind ment mentioned mind nature neglected ness never Night Thoughts numbers observed occasion once opinion Orrery passion performance perhaps Pindar pleased pleasure poem poet poetical poetry Pope Pope's pounds praise present printed publick published Queen reader reason received remarkable reputation satire Savage says seems shew shewn Sir Robert Walpole solicited sometimes soon sufficient supposed Swift Thomson tion told translation Tyrconnel unkle verses virtue Whigs write written wrote Young