Criticism on Milton's Paradise Lost : from The Spectator, 31 December 1711-3 May 1712Constable, 1868 - 152 |
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Strona 14
... Lines , Si quid novifli rectius iftis Candidus imperti , fi non his utere mecum . If you have made any better Remarks of your own , communicate them with Candour ; if not , make use of these I present you with . The SPECTATOR . Cedite ...
... Lines , Si quid novifli rectius iftis Candidus imperti , fi non his utere mecum . If you have made any better Remarks of your own , communicate them with Candour ; if not , make use of these I present you with . The SPECTATOR . Cedite ...
Strona 29
... Line in him which has been objected against , by the Criticks , as a point of Wit . It is in his ninth Book , where Func speaking of the Trojans , how they furvived the Ruins of their City , expreffes her felf in the following Words ...
... Line in him which has been objected against , by the Criticks , as a point of Wit . It is in his ninth Book , where Func speaking of the Trojans , how they furvived the Ruins of their City , expreffes her felf in the following Words ...
Strona 33
... Line are represented as created Beings ; and that in the other , Adam and Eve are con- founded with their Sons and Daughters . Such little Blemishes as these , when the Thought is great and natural , we should , with Horace , impute to ...
... Line are represented as created Beings ; and that in the other , Adam and Eve are con- founded with their Sons and Daughters . Such little Blemishes as these , when the Thought is great and natural , we should , with Horace , impute to ...
Strona 41
... Lines , Errors , like Straws , upon the Surface flow ; He who would fearch for Pearls must dive below . A true Critick ought to dwell rather upon Excel- lencies than Imperfections , to discover the concealed Beauties of a Writer , and ...
... Lines , Errors , like Straws , upon the Surface flow ; He who would fearch for Pearls must dive below . A true Critick ought to dwell rather upon Excel- lencies than Imperfections , to discover the concealed Beauties of a Writer , and ...
Strona 50
... Lines are perhaps as plain , fimple and un- adorned as any of the whole Poem , in which particu- lar the Author has conform'd himself to the Example of Homer , and the Precept of Horace . His Invocation to a Work which turns in a great ...
... Lines are perhaps as plain , fimple and un- adorned as any of the whole Poem , in which particu- lar the Author has conform'd himself to the Example of Homer , and the Precept of Horace . His Invocation to a Work which turns in a great ...
Kluczowe wyrazy i wyrażenia
Action Adam Adam and Eve Æneas Æneid Allegory alſo Angels appear Ariftotle aſtoniſhing Author Battel beautiful becauſe Characters Circumſtances Converſation Creation Criticiſm Criticks deſcribed Deſcription Deſign Difcourfe diſcover Divine Earth Eneid Epic Poem Epic Poetry Epiſode Expreffion Fable fame fecond feems felf feveral fhall fhew fhort firft Firſt Book firſt Parents fome fuch fufficient fuitable give greateſt Greatneſs Heaven Hell Heroic Poem himſelf Hiſtory Homer Iliad Imagination Infernal Inftances juſt laſt likewiſe Majefty Mankind Maſter meaſure Meffiah Milton Mind moſt muſt Nature noble obferved occafion Ovid Paffage paffed Paffion Paper Paradife Loft particular Paſſage Perfons pleaſed Pleaſure Poet Poetical Poetry preſent racters raiſed Reader Reaſon repreſented rifes riſes ſame Satan ſee ſelf Sentiments ſeveral ſhall ſhort ſhould ſome ſpeak SPECTATOR Speech Spirit ſtill Sublime ſuch take notice thee thefe themſelves theſe thing thofe thoſe Thoughts tion uſe Verſe Virgil Viſion wherein whole Poem