The Influence of Horace on the Chief English Poets of the Nineteenth Century, Tom 2Yale University Press, 1916 - 117 |
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Strona 14
... fact that this advice to be moderate is so often reiterated in his work goes. 1 The snow has fled away, grass now returns to the fields, and leaves to the trees. The Grace, with the Nymphs and her own twin sisters, ventures unrobed to ...
... fact that this advice to be moderate is so often reiterated in his work goes. 1 The snow has fled away, grass now returns to the fields, and leaves to the trees. The Grace, with the Nymphs and her own twin sisters, ventures unrobed to ...
Strona 12
... fact , I suspect his light touch of all subjects betrays to us that he dwelt with no serious regard on any one of them . He professes at times a notable enthusi- asm for the country and rural life : yet one always feels that his ...
... fact , I suspect his light touch of all subjects betrays to us that he dwelt with no serious regard on any one of them . He professes at times a notable enthusi- asm for the country and rural life : yet one always feels that his ...
Strona 13
... facts of his life as that his father was a freedman , and that he once narrowly escaped being struck by a falling tree , but the characteristics of the man as his poetry discloses them . And for a first descriptive epithet we may echo ...
... facts of his life as that his father was a freedman , and that he once narrowly escaped being struck by a falling tree , but the characteristics of the man as his poetry discloses them . And for a first descriptive epithet we may echo ...
Strona 14
... fact that this advice to 1 The snow has fled away , grass now returns to the fields , and leaves to the trees . The Grace , with the Nymphs and her own twin sisters , ventures unrobed to lead the choric dance . ' Do not hope for ...
... fact that this advice to 1 The snow has fled away , grass now returns to the fields , and leaves to the trees . The Grace , with the Nymphs and her own twin sisters , ventures unrobed to lead the choric dance . ' Do not hope for ...
Strona 16
... fact , is the princi- pal merit of the descriptions of external nature in Horace - the creation of a vivid impression by the use of exactly the right word or phrase . What lover of the Odes does not know amoenum Lucretilem and Albu ...
... fact , is the princi- pal merit of the descriptions of external nature in Horace - the creation of a vivid impression by the use of exactly the right word or phrase . What lover of the Odes does not know amoenum Lucretilem and Albu ...
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Kluczowe wyrazy i wyrażenia
acquaintance with Horace admiration aes triplex Alcaics Alfred Lord Tennyson Augustus Bandusiae Bard Book 9 Browning Browning's Byron Carm Childe Harold's Pilgrimage classic Coleridge Dante Don Juan echo English Literature Epist Epod feel friends Genus irritabile vatum Greek Hadriae Hallam Tennyson happy Homer Horace's ibimus influence of Horace inquieti turbidus Hadriae Keats Latin letter to John letter to Thomas Maecenas Memoriam mihi mind Monaeses Motto neque Nunc Ovid paraphrase passage patria pede phrase poem beginning poet's Poetica poetry praise Probable traces prose quae Queen Mab quid quod quotation quoted reference Revolt of Islam Ring Robert Browning Roman poet Rome Sabine farm satirist says Serm Shelley Shelley's stanza Telephus tenacem propositi thee things Thomas Love Peacock thou traces of Horace translation Unquestionable traces verse Virgil virum vita William Allingham word Wordsworth writes
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Strona 89 - WELL for him whose will is strong ! He suffers, but he will not suffer long ; He suffers, but he cannot suffer wrong : For him nor moves the loud world's random mock, Nor all Calamity's hugest waves confound, Who seems a promontory of rock, That, coirpass'd round with turbulent sound, In middle ocean meets the surging shock, Tempest-buffeted, citadel-crown'd.
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Strona 39 - But there is, I fear, a prosaic set growing up among us, editors of booklets, book-worms, index-hunters, or men of great memories and no imagination, who impute themselves to the poet, and so believe that he, too, has no imagination, but is for ever poking his nose between the pages of some old volume in order to see what he can appropriate. They will not allow one to say "Ring the bell" without finding that we have taken it from Sir P. Sidney, or even to use such a simple expression as the ocean...
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Strona 53 - Give unto me, made lowly wise, The spirit of self-sacrifice; The confidence of reason give ; And in the light of truth thy Bondman let me live!