John DrydenArchon Books, 1966 - 92 sidor |
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... gave us our first deliberate estimate of them , and in so doing became our first great master of appreciative criticism . Here again we can trace the interest which he had taken in Corneille's collected edition containing not only the ...
... gave us our first deliberate estimate of them , and in so doing became our first great master of appreciative criticism . Here again we can trace the interest which he had taken in Corneille's collected edition containing not only the ...
Sida 27
... gave him the opportunity of saying what he wanted to say and as he wanted to say it . We cannot read Tyrannick Love and The Conquest of Granada without seeing that they were an outlet for overflowing energy . The vigour with which they ...
... gave him the opportunity of saying what he wanted to say and as he wanted to say it . We cannot read Tyrannick Love and The Conquest of Granada without seeing that they were an outlet for overflowing energy . The vigour with which they ...
Sida 76
... gave , is quietly resign'd : Content with poverty , my Soul I arm ; And Vertue , tho ' in rags , will keep me warm . hour . This is far from the manner of Horace , as Dryden meant it to be . The Pindaric style gave him liberty to expand ...
... gave , is quietly resign'd : Content with poverty , my Soul I arm ; And Vertue , tho ' in rags , will keep me warm . hour . This is far from the manner of Horace , as Dryden meant it to be . The Pindaric style gave him liberty to expand ...
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Absalom and Achitophel admiration Almanzor Annus Mirabilis Antony argument Aureng-zebe Ben Jonson better blank verse called century character Chaucer comedy Congreve Conquest of Granada Corneille couplet criticism doubt drama Dramatick Poesie dramatist Dryden knew early poems edition Elizabethan English epic Essay Of Dramatick excelled Exclusion Bill Fables familiar Fool gave gives Heav'n hero heroic play heroic poem Homer imitation John Dryden Johnson kind language learned Lectures lines Mac Flecknoe matter methods Milton mind Muse nature never numbers Ovid Panther Paradise Lost pass passage perhaps Pindaric verse Poet Laureate poetry Pope's portrait praise preface prologue prose quote reader reason Religio Laici remark Restoration rhyme Richard Flecknoe satire satirist says Scott Shadwell Shakespeare speak spirit stage stanza story tells theatre thought Tillotson translation Tyrannick Love unity versification Virgil Waller whole poem words writing written wrote Zimri