Glossary of John Dryden's Critical TermsU of Minnesota Press, 1969 - 135 sidor Although John Dryden is, as Samuel Johnson described him, the father of modern criticism, his critical writings are difficult for twentieth-century readers to understand and appreciate. Part of the problem lies in the fact that many of the critical terms. |
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... character who displayed it . The character literally became a " humour . " From this meaning it was an easy step to designate a land of comedy , which represents " humours , " as " comedy of humours " ( sometimes called " mechanic ...
... character who displayed it . The character literally became a " humour . " From this meaning it was an easy step to designate a land of comedy , which represents " humours , " as " comedy of humours " ( sometimes called " mechanic ...
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... characters that distinguish and as it were , individuate him from all other writers " ( Wat- son , ed . , John Dryden , Of Dramatic Poesy , I , 271 ) . It is this " turn of thoughts and expression " which a good translator is supposed ...
... characters that distinguish and as it were , individuate him from all other writers " ( Wat- son , ed . , John Dryden , Of Dramatic Poesy , I , 271 ) . It is this " turn of thoughts and expression " which a good translator is supposed ...
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... character or person in a play or poem , rather than a man who acts a part in a play . To " allege " in several instances means to cite ( a passage or ex- ample ) as evidence . To be " learned " or to have " learning " usually means that ...
... character or person in a play or poem , rather than a man who acts a part in a play . To " allege " in several instances means to cite ( a passage or ex- ample ) as evidence . To be " learned " or to have " learning " usually means that ...
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... characters , the subject , and the genre of the play . Also , the quality of the characters , the seriousness of the subject , and the importance of the genre should be in agreement with each other . A tragedy , for example , which is a ...
... characters , the subject , and the genre of the play . Also , the quality of the characters , the seriousness of the subject , and the importance of the genre should be in agreement with each other . A tragedy , for example , which is a ...
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... character- istic personal stance appears to be his abhorrence of extremes , and therefore he constantly vacillates in attempting to find a balance , a golden mean , on every occasion , in judging all works of art and in debating all ...
... character- istic personal stance appears to be his abhorrence of extremes , and therefore he constantly vacillates in attempting to find a balance , a golden mean , on every occasion , in judging all works of art and in debating all ...
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AAHP Aeneid beauty Boileau character comedy critical DAVd Davenant Spingarn DCOPS DCOPS 74 DECG decorum DEDP Describing diction Dramatic Dryden says elegant elocutio elocution English expression faculty fancy French genius genre heroic poem Hobbes Spingarn humour I.AAHP I.DECG I.EDP I.GCT I.HAR I.OHP I.PAM I.PEL I.POE I.PRL II.DAV II.DCOPS II.LP II.PAA II.PDS II.PEP II.PF II.PPBPP II.PS imagination imitation invention John Dryden Jonson judgment language literary LWW2 meaning Menippean satire Milton nature painting passions play plot PNOEM poesy poet poetic poetry PPBPP PRAV propriety raillery rhetorical rhyme Rymer Rymer Z satire Shakespeare Sprat Spingarn SS.II.DIE SS.VI.DTC SS.VII.VDG SS.VIII.DLT SS.XIV.DAVd SS.XV SS.XV.AP SS.XV.PNOEM SS.XVII SS.XVII.APa SS.XVII.PPBPPd style sublime thought tragedy translation tropes unities verse VII.VDG VIII.PC Virgil witty words X.PRLaici XIII.SAVPMF XIV.DAVd XIV.DG XV.AP XV.PNOEM XVII.APa XVII.DPL XVII.LPd XVII.PPBPPd XVIII.CPd XVIII.LLd