The Prelude to Poetry: The English Poets in Defence and Praise of Their Own ArtErnest Rhys Dent, 1970 - 304 |
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Strona 216
... manner in which it is worn . A majestic form and graceful motions will express themselves through the most barbarous and tasteless costume . Few poets of the highest class have chosen to exhibit the beauty of their conceptions in its ...
... manner in which it is worn . A majestic form and graceful motions will express themselves through the most barbarous and tasteless costume . Few poets of the highest class have chosen to exhibit the beauty of their conceptions in its ...
Strona 275
... manner . Cowper renders him ill because he is slow in his movement , and elaborate in his style ; Pope renders him ... manner . All four translators diverge from their original at other points besides those named ; but it is at the ...
... manner . Cowper renders him ill because he is slow in his movement , and elaborate in his style ; Pope renders him ... manner . All four translators diverge from their original at other points besides those named ; but it is at the ...
Strona 278
... manner , though a very good and sound manner , is certainly neither the grand manner nor the manner of Homer . The rhymed ten - syllable couplet being thus excluded , blank verse offers itself for the translator's use . The first kind ...
... manner , though a very good and sound manner , is certainly neither the grand manner nor the manner of Homer . The rhymed ten - syllable couplet being thus excluded , blank verse offers itself for the translator's use . The first kind ...
Spis treści
INTRODUCTION | 1 |
THOMAS CAMPION | 61 |
SAMUEL DANIEL | 86 |
Prawa autorskie | |
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accent admiration Aeneas alwayes ancient Aristotle ballad beauty better blank verse cæsura called cause composition Dante delight diction Dimeter divine dooth doth eare effect English English poetry Epigramme Euripides example excellent expression faculty farre feelings genius Greekes harmony hath haue hexameter Homer human Iambick imagination imitation indeede kind knowledge language Latine learning Lucretius lyric manner matter measure metre metrical Milton mind Muses nations naturall nature neuer never noble objects observe Paradise Lost passion perfect Petrarch Philosopher Plato pleasure Plutarch poem Poesie poet poet's poetic poeticall poetry produced prose Reader reason rhyme rhythm Rime Ryme selfe sense Shelley shew sillables sith song Sophocles sound speak spirit Spondee stanza style Theocritus theyr things thou thought tion Trochaick Trochy true truely truth vertue Virgil vpon W. H. Auden words write written