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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Strona 3
... POETRY AT THE DEATH OF SHAKESPEARE . THE time seems to have arrived at last , when we may contemplate without passion that precise , mundane , and rhetorical order of poetry which is mainly identified in our minds with the names and ...
... POETRY AT THE DEATH OF SHAKESPEARE . THE time seems to have arrived at last , when we may contemplate without passion that precise , mundane , and rhetorical order of poetry which is mainly identified in our minds with the names and ...
Strona 4
... poetry seemed no poetry at all . Dryden and Pope , who had been enthroned so long in secure promise of immortality , felt their shrines shaken as by an earthquake . It became the fashion to say that these men were no poets at all , and ...
... poetry seemed no poetry at all . Dryden and Pope , who had been enthroned so long in secure promise of immortality , felt their shrines shaken as by an earthquake . It became the fashion to say that these men were no poets at all , and ...
Strona 10
An Inquiry Into the Causes and Phenomena of the Rise of Classical Poetry in England Edmund Gosse. movement was , curiously enough , entirely unknown to the Elizabethans ) trammelling themselves by a series of pedantic and ... Poetry at the.
An Inquiry Into the Causes and Phenomena of the Rise of Classical Poetry in England Edmund Gosse. movement was , curiously enough , entirely unknown to the Elizabethans ) trammelling themselves by a series of pedantic and ... Poetry at the.
Strona 11
... poetry the sub - Miltonic phraseology which took so fast a hold of the eighteenth century . He had not learned , however , to avoid the exact expression , and names his peaches and walnuts like a market- gardener . Shaftesbury ...
... poetry the sub - Miltonic phraseology which took so fast a hold of the eighteenth century . He had not learned , however , to avoid the exact expression , and names his peaches and walnuts like a market- gardener . Shaftesbury ...
Strona 12
... poetry were bald and insipid . But we must be careful to discriminate . This indirectness , these strange , un- natural forms of circumlocution , were not in them- selves characteristic of the classical school alone ; all poetry , the ...
... poetry were bald and insipid . But we must be careful to discriminate . This indirectness , these strange , un- natural forms of circumlocution , were not in them- selves characteristic of the classical school alone ; all poetry , the ...
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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