Critical EssaysThoemmes Press, 1998 - 327 |
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... Taste ( 1755 ) John Gilbert Cooper Essays ; Read to a Literary Society ( 1759 ) James Moor Volume 4 : Two Discourses ( 1725 ) Jonathan Richardson Volume 5 : A Dialogue on Beauty . In the Manner of Plato ( 1731 ) George Stubbes A ...
... Taste ( 1755 ) John Gilbert Cooper Essays ; Read to a Literary Society ( 1759 ) James Moor Volume 4 : Two Discourses ( 1725 ) Jonathan Richardson Volume 5 : A Dialogue on Beauty . In the Manner of Plato ( 1731 ) George Stubbes A ...
Strona 85
... taste . - See WARTON's Virg . in the Notes . As well as the following verses , which are successful rivals of Virgilian harmony : “ Te , Dea , te fugiunt venti , te nubila cœli , “ Adventumq ; tuum ; tibi fuaves dædala tellus ...
... taste . - See WARTON's Virg . in the Notes . As well as the following verses , which are successful rivals of Virgilian harmony : “ Te , Dea , te fugiunt venti , te nubila cœli , “ Adventumq ; tuum ; tibi fuaves dædala tellus ...
Strona 148
Edward Burnaby Greene. of speaking ; he has literary experience , and taste . How you would receive it , you have long experienced . When conducted by a fubordinate voice and manner , your pleasure has been changed into disgust . But ...
Edward Burnaby Greene. of speaking ; he has literary experience , and taste . How you would receive it , you have long experienced . When conducted by a fubordinate voice and manner , your pleasure has been changed into disgust . But ...
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admirable ÆNEAS Æneid ÆSCHYLUS affect againſt almoſt ANCHISES ancient ANTILOCHUS beauties becauſe beft beſt cenfure character characteriſtic cife compariſon compofition confideration conftitution conftruction critic defcribed DEMOSTHENES deſcription DIDO difpofition diſplay elegant ENEAS Engliſh epiſode eſtabliſhment eſteemed EURYTION excellent exertions expreffed expreffion facrifice fame fays fecond feems fent fentiment feveral fhall fhould fimilar firft firſt folemn fome former foul fpeech fpirit fubject fublimity fuch fuffer fufficient fuperior genius Grecian Greek hero HERODOTUS himſelf hiſtory HOMER honor Hyperbaton Iliad indulged inftance inſpired itſelf JOSEPH WARTON judgement laft laſt latter lefs leſs LONGINUS Lufus maſter ment merits MNESTHEUS moft moſt muft muſt nature NISUS numbers obferved occafion OVID paffage paffion perfons poet poetical poetry prefent racter reader reaſon reflection reprefented repreſentation Roman Section ſeems ſeveral ſpeaking ſuch thefe themſelves theſe thofe thoſe thought tion tranflation Trojan ufually unleſs uſed verfe verſes VIRGIL whofe whoſe words writer καὶ