From Shakespeare to PopeDodd, Mead, 1885 - 242 |
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Strona 4
... curious passage of his youth , made himself the daring spokesman of this heresy . " Yes , a schism Nurtured by foppery and barbarism Made great Apollo blush for this his land . Men were thought wise who could not understand His glories ...
... curious passage of his youth , made himself the daring spokesman of this heresy . " Yes , a schism Nurtured by foppery and barbarism Made great Apollo blush for this his land . Men were thought wise who could not understand His glories ...
Strona 8
... the marvel of a nation that was free to use in any combination all the endless varie- ties of iambic and trochaic movement ( for the dactylic and anapæstic * movement was , curiously enough , entirely 8 POETRY AT THE DEATH.
... the marvel of a nation that was free to use in any combination all the endless varie- ties of iambic and trochaic movement ( for the dactylic and anapæstic * movement was , curiously enough , entirely 8 POETRY AT THE DEATH.
Strona 9
Edmund Gosse. and anapæstic * movement was , curiously enough , entirely unknown to the Elizabethans ) trammelling themselves by a series of pedantic and artificial rules , the function of which was to reduce to a minimum the effects ...
Edmund Gosse. and anapæstic * movement was , curiously enough , entirely unknown to the Elizabethans ) trammelling themselves by a series of pedantic and artificial rules , the function of which was to reduce to a minimum the effects ...
Strona 13
... the precise manner of ing sons of those fair eyes , your fertile mothers , " and as many more unlikely things as the reader's curiosity can wish for . that school was introduced , it was Parini , who OF SHAKESPEARE . 13.
... the precise manner of ing sons of those fair eyes , your fertile mothers , " and as many more unlikely things as the reader's curiosity can wish for . that school was introduced , it was Parini , who OF SHAKESPEARE . 13.
Strona 18
... curious circumstance , which I do not recollect to have seen noted by any critic , that this great leader of the precise style of poetry , this harbinger of Boileau and Racine , wrote less in alexandrines than any other French poet on ...
... curious circumstance , which I do not recollect to have seen noted by any critic , that this great leader of the precise style of poetry , this harbinger of Boileau and Racine , wrote less in alexandrines than any other French poet on ...
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Anthony à Wood Ausonius Beaconsfield beautiful Ben Jonson called Cambridge Chamberlayne Charles charming Clarendon classical school Cooper's Hill copy of verses couplet Cowley critic Cromwell curious Cyril Tourneur Davenant Davenant's death distich Donne doubt Dryden Earl edition Edmund Waller Elizabethans England English poetry epic Evelyn Exile famous France French give Gondibert grace hand heroic heroic couplet House interesting King Lady Lady Dorothy Sidney language less lines literary literature lived Lord Brooke lyrical Malherbe Marinist Marvell Milton mind Muse never numbers Nunappleton Oliver Cromwell parliament person piece plays poem poet poet's poetical political Pope possessed praise printed prosody published Queen readers reign Restoration rhymes romantic romantic poetry Roundheads Sacharissa scholar seems sense seventeenth century Shakespeare Sidney Spenser stanza story style taste thing thou tion tragedy versification writing written wrote young