From Shakespeare to Pope: An Inquiry Into the Causes and Phenomena of the Rise of Classical Poetry in EnglandAt the University Press, 1885 - 298 |
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... brought them rot on shore ; Yet still that murmur lingers at their core , And fancy's light across their tropic bed Is shed . I , less than bird or shell , More volatile , more fragile far than these , Lighting an hour by these New ...
... brought them rot on shore ; Yet still that murmur lingers at their core , And fancy's light across their tropic bed Is shed . I , less than bird or shell , More volatile , more fragile far than these , Lighting an hour by these New ...
Strona 11
... brought the speaker closer to the grace of Latinity . It was thought that the old direct manner of speaking was crude and futile ; that a romantic poet who wished to allude to caterpillars could do so without any exercise of his ...
... brought the speaker closer to the grace of Latinity . It was thought that the old direct manner of speaking was crude and futile ; that a romantic poet who wished to allude to caterpillars could do so without any exercise of his ...
Strona 30
... brought face to face with a fiery indigna- tion . The reaction against the bondage of the eighteenth century still gives us a tender partiality towards what is exaggerated , violent , and bom- bastic . Still , even in this matter , I ...
... brought face to face with a fiery indigna- tion . The reaction against the bondage of the eighteenth century still gives us a tender partiality towards what is exaggerated , violent , and bom- bastic . Still , even in this matter , I ...
Strona 58
... Brought Mars and Venus to the conquered side . " The prosody of such lines as these is quite undistinguishable from that of the classic school from 1660 to the close of the seventeenth century . Dryden proceeded no further than this in ...
... Brought Mars and Venus to the conquered side . " The prosody of such lines as these is quite undistinguishable from that of the classic school from 1660 to the close of the seventeenth century . Dryden proceeded no further than this in ...
Strona 61
... brought the news , he was still at morning prayer . The story current at the time , which Clarendon repeats and Waller versifies , is that the King , when the news was whispered to him , re- mained kneeling without change of countenance ...
... brought the news , he was still at morning prayer . The story current at the time , which Clarendon repeats and Waller versifies , is that the King , when the news was whispered to him , re- mained kneeling without change of countenance ...
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according to St Ave Maria Lane Beaconsfield beautiful Book Cambridge Warehouse Chamberlayne Charles charming Clarendon classical school cloth Cooper's Hill couplet Cowley critic Cromwell Crown 8vo curious Cyril Tourneur Davenant Davenant's death Demy 8vo Demy Octavo Denham distich Donne Dryden Earl Edited Edmund Waller England English poetry epic France French friends Gondibert Gospel according grace Greek heroic heroic couplet House interesting J. E. SANDYS John King Lady language late less literary literature LL.D London lyrical M. T. Ciceronis M.A. Price Malherbe Marinist Marvell Milton Notes numbers Nunappleton Octavo Oliver Cromwell Oxford P. G. TAIT Parliament piece poem poet poet's poetical political Pope possessed praise readers reign romantic Sacharissa seems seventeenth century Shakespeare Sidney St John's St John's College stanza style taste thing thou tragedy Translation Trinity College University of Cambridge versification writing written wrote young