Collected Works, Volume 1Clarendon P., 1966 |
Vanuit het boek
Resultaten 1-3 van 90
Pagina 202
... poetry ; a rule borrowed from nature , of which the poet is always an imitator ; let 30 there be nothing monstrous . If we strictly attend to this , it will be quite unecessary to perplex you and myself with technical terms , and ...
... poetry ; a rule borrowed from nature , of which the poet is always an imitator ; let 30 there be nothing monstrous . If we strictly attend to this , it will be quite unecessary to perplex you and myself with technical terms , and ...
Pagina 264
... poetry first rose out of prose , in turn , it gave birth to every prosaic excellence . Musical period , concise expression , and delicacy of sentiment , were all excellencies derived from the poet ; in short , he not only pre- 5 ceded ...
... poetry first rose out of prose , in turn , it gave birth to every prosaic excellence . Musical period , concise expression , and delicacy of sentiment , were all excellencies derived from the poet ; in short , he not only pre- 5 ceded ...
Pagina 504
... Poetry is much an easier and more agreeable species of composition than prose , and could a man live by it , it were no unpleasant employment to be a Poet ' ( Collected Letters , pp . 65–66 ) . 4 Cf. ' On Wit ' in the Bee , No. III ...
... Poetry is much an easier and more agreeable species of composition than prose , and could a man live by it , it were no unpleasant employment to be a Poet ' ( Collected Letters , pp . 65–66 ) . 4 Cf. ' On Wit ' in the Bee , No. III ...
Inhoudsopgave
REVIEWS | 5 |
The History of Two Persons of Quality | 16 |
A Treatise upon Dropsies | 23 |
Copyright | |
33 andere gedeelten niet getoond
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
absurdity acquainted admiration amusement ancient animals appears Aristotle Ascribed to Goldsmith Author beauty chap character Cicero Critical Review edition Encyclopédie endeavours England English Enquiry Epigoni Essays Euripides Europe excellence fame faults favour French genius Gentleman's Magazine give Guaycurus happy History Homer honour humour imagination imitation Italian Italy Kedington King knowlege labour lady language Letters lived Lucretius Mandane mankind manner merit modern Monthly Review nation nature never object obliged observed Oliver Goldsmith Ovid pain paragraph passion Patroclus performance perhaps person philosopher Pindar pleased pleasure poem poet poetry polite learning praise present proper reader reason regard remarks republic of letters ridiculous says Scythian seems sentence sentiments shew Sophocles spirit stile sublime surprize taste thing thought tion translation trifling truth verse Virgil virtue Voltaire volumes whole word writer Zamti ΙΟ