Lives of the English Poets1964 |
Vanuit het boek
Resultaten 1-3 van 28
Pagina 71
... happy never must be free ; Envy that does with misery reside , The joy and the revenge of ruin'd pride . Into this poem he seems to have collected all his powers ; and after this he did not often bring upon his anvil such stubborn and ...
... happy never must be free ; Envy that does with misery reside , The joy and the revenge of ruin'd pride . Into this poem he seems to have collected all his powers ; and after this he did not often bring upon his anvil such stubborn and ...
Pagina 212
... happy if he had immediately departed for London ; but his negligence did not suffer him to consider that such proofs of kindness were not often to be expected , and that this ardour of benevolence was in a great degree the effect of ...
... happy if he had immediately departed for London ; but his negligence did not suffer him to consider that such proofs of kindness were not often to be expected , and that this ardour of benevolence was in a great degree the effect of ...
Pagina 247
... happy casualty ; and it is not likely that any felicity , like the discovery of a new race of preternatural agents , should happen twice to the same man . Of this poem the author was , I think , allowed to enjoy the praise for a long ...
... happy casualty ; and it is not likely that any felicity , like the discovery of a new race of preternatural agents , should happen twice to the same man . Of this poem the author was , I think , allowed to enjoy the praise for a long ...
Inhoudsopgave
The Satirical Letters of St Jerome | 1 |
From The Life of John Milton 16081674 | 21 |
From The Life of John Dryden 16311700 | 43 |
Copyright | |
7 andere gedeelten niet getoond
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
Absalom and Achitophel acquaintance Addison Æneid afterwards allowed appeared Atrides Bolingbroke censure character Cibber confessed considered contempt Cowley criticism death declared delighted diction dignity diligence discovered DONNE Dryden Dunciad easily elegance endeavoured English English poetry Essay excellence faults favour fortune friends genius Georgics happy Homer honour human Iliad images imagination Johnson kind knew knowledge labour language learning lence letter likewise lines live Lord Bolingbroke Lord Halifax Lord Tyrconnel Lycidas mankind ment Milton mind mother nature neglected ness never o'er observed opinion Ovid panegyric Paradise Lost passion performance perhaps pleased pleasure poem poet poetical poetry Pope Pope's praise published Queen reader reason remarks reputation resentment retired Richard Savage satire Savage Savage's says seems sentiments Sir Robert Walpole solicited sometimes stanza sufficient supposed thought tion translation truth Tyrconnel verses Virgil virtue write written wrote