Letters to Lord Byron on a Question of Poetical Criticism: With Corrections, to which are ... Added the Letter to Mr. Campbell, as Far as Regards Põetical Criticism, and the Answer to the Writer in the Quarterly Review, Together with an Answer to Some Objections, and Further IllusHurst, Robinson, 1822 - 217 |
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Strona iii
... only ventured to take , as an inscrip- tion to my shield , his Lordship's motto , with a trifling alteration : He that plays at " BowLS " ( with the " SUN and MOON " ) must expect " RUBBERS ; " Which is only an old " proverb , " for.
... only ventured to take , as an inscrip- tion to my shield , his Lordship's motto , with a trifling alteration : He that plays at " BowLS " ( with the " SUN and MOON " ) must expect " RUBBERS ; " Which is only an old " proverb , " for.
Strona iv
... Lordship's arms the " SUPPORTERS ; " though I do not wish to touch a feather of the GRACEFUL and GLITTERING CREST OF HIS HIGH POETICAL CHARACTER . With respect to the other motto I have adopted , " NATURE must give way to ART !! " it is ...
... Lordship's arms the " SUPPORTERS ; " though I do not wish to touch a feather of the GRACEFUL and GLITTERING CREST OF HIS HIGH POETICAL CHARACTER . With respect to the other motto I have adopted , " NATURE must give way to ART !! " it is ...
Strona 1
... Lordship as a controversialist upon any point , I am well aware of the great talents opposed to me . I have read , very attentively , your Remarks on my Life of POPE , on the first part of Vindication in the Pamphleteer , and on my ...
... Lordship as a controversialist upon any point , I am well aware of the great talents opposed to me . I have read , very attentively , your Remarks on my Life of POPE , on the first part of Vindication in the Pamphleteer , and on my ...
Strona 2
... Lordship's opinion ) INVARiable . I thank you , my Lord , for this opportunity of stating the grounds of my sentiments more expli- citly , ( which I know you would not intentionally pervert ) ; and more particularly for the honour- able ...
... Lordship's opinion ) INVARiable . I thank you , my Lord , for this opportunity of stating the grounds of my sentiments more expli- citly , ( which I know you would not intentionally pervert ) ; and more particularly for the honour- able ...
Strona 3
... Lordship , Marte meo , and am not much afraid of the result ; for , magna est veritas , et prevalebit . Your observations , in answer to what I said of parts of POPE's moral character , may be comprised in few words . It was far from my ...
... Lordship , Marte meo , and am not much afraid of the result ; for , magna est veritas , et prevalebit . Your observations , in answer to what I said of parts of POPE's moral character , may be comprised in few words . It was far from my ...
Kluczowe wyrazy i wyrażenia
1891 ORGANIZED 1891 UNIVERSITY abstractedly ACHILLES adapted to poetry admitted affecting answer arguments artificial associations beautiful in nature blue bunting BOWLES BowLES's bust CAMPBELL CAMPBELL's canal circumstances derived described Edinburgh Review ERSITY execution exquisite external nature feelings genius Georgics heart highest HOMER Hounslow Heath ideas Iliad images drawn images from art in-door nature JUNIOR STANFORD LELAND STANFORD UNIVERSITY LELAND UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES LELAND Lord BYRON Lordship Macbeth manners MILTON moral never object observe ORGANIZED 1891 Paddington painting Paradise Lost passage passions pathetic Philoctetes picture picturesque pigsty poet poetical beauty poetical character poetical sublimity POPE POPE's principles of poetry proposition Quarterly Review reader Roman holiday sails Salisbury Plain satires SHAKESPEARE shew ship SOPHOCLES speak STANFORD JUNIOR UNIVERSITY STANFORD LELAND STANFORD STANFORD ORGANIZED sublime and beautiful sublime or beautiful super-artificial THEOCRITUS thing thought tical trees UNIVE UNIVERSITY LELAND UNWIN's needle Venice waves winds word writer
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Strona 61 - Were with his heart, and that was far away ; He recked not of the life he lost nor prize, But where his rude hut by the Danube lay, There were his young barbarians all at play, There was their Dacian mother, — he, their sire, Butchered to make a Roman holiday, — All this rushed with his blood. — Shall he expire, And unavenged ? — Arise ! ye Goths, and glut your ire!