Critical EssaysThoemmes Press, 1998 - 327 |
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Strona 26
... thou fo full of heaviness , O my foul ; and why art thou fo disquieted " within me ? ” And afterwards . 1 1 My heart is fmitten asunder as with a " fword 6 My 26 VII . SECTION nature, without which all elegiac reflections ...
... thou fo full of heaviness , O my foul ; and why art thou fo disquieted " within me ? ” And afterwards . 1 1 My heart is fmitten asunder as with a " fword 6 My 26 VII . SECTION nature, without which all elegiac reflections ...
Strona 27
... thou fo vexed , O my foul , " and why art thou fo difquieted within " me ? Put thy truft in God ; for I will yet praife Him , who is the help of my coun- " tenance , and my God . " - Pfalm xlii . The whole is an appeal to the heart . T ...
... thou fo vexed , O my foul , " and why art thou fo difquieted within " me ? Put thy truft in God ; for I will yet praife Him , who is the help of my coun- " tenance , and my God . " - Pfalm xlii . The whole is an appeal to the heart . T ...
Strona 107
Edward Burnaby Greene. " O God , when thou wenteft forth through the wilderness , " wentest before the people ; when thou " The earth fhook , and the heavens " droped , at the prefence of God : Sinai alfo " was moved at the prefence of ...
Edward Burnaby Greene. " O God , when thou wenteft forth through the wilderness , " wentest before the people ; when thou " The earth fhook , and the heavens " droped , at the prefence of God : Sinai alfo " was moved at the prefence of ...
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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