An Essay on the Genius and Writings of Pope, Volume 2J. Dodsley, 1782 |
Vanuit het boek
Resultaten 1-5 van 36
Pagina 33
... still the favourite of every reader of taste and judgment . Homer copied true natural man- ners , which , however rough and uncultivated , will always • form an agreeable and pleasing picture ; but the pencil of the English poet was ...
... still the favourite of every reader of taste and judgment . Homer copied true natural man- ners , which , however rough and uncultivated , will always • form an agreeable and pleasing picture ; but the pencil of the English poet was ...
Pagina 35
... still to and fro did flie , And found no place where fafe he shroud him might . Lamenting Sorrow did in darknesse lie , And Shame his ugly face did hide from living eye . To shew the richness of his fancy , he has given us another ...
... still to and fro did flie , And found no place where fafe he shroud him might . Lamenting Sorrow did in darknesse lie , And Shame his ugly face did hide from living eye . To shew the richness of his fancy , he has given us another ...
Pagina 36
... Still ope he keeps for that occafion ; Ne ever rests he in tranquillity , The roaring billows beat his bowre so boisterously t . Here all is in life and motion ; here we behold the true Poet or MAKER ; this is creation ; it is here ...
... Still ope he keeps for that occafion ; Ne ever rests he in tranquillity , The roaring billows beat his bowre so boisterously t . Here all is in life and motion ; here we behold the true Poet or MAKER ; this is creation ; it is here ...
Pagina 41
... Still from Apollo vindicates her fhade . The flowers that grow on the water - fide could not be fufficiently described without saying , that The pale Narcissus on the bank , in vain , Transformed , gazes on himself again . In the lines ...
... Still from Apollo vindicates her fhade . The flowers that grow on the water - fide could not be fufficiently described without saying , that The pale Narcissus on the bank , in vain , Transformed , gazes on himself again . In the lines ...
Pagina 44
... still I love the language of his heart . His prose works give us the most amiable idea both of his abilities and his heart . His Pindaric odes cannot be perused with common patience by a lover of antiquity . He that would fee Pindar's ...
... still I love the language of his heart . His prose works give us the most amiable idea both of his abilities and his heart . His Pindaric odes cannot be perused with common patience by a lover of antiquity . He that would fee Pindar's ...
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
Adamo Addiſon addreſſed Æneid almoſt alſo anſwered beauty becauſe beſt Biſhop Boileau Bolingbroke cauſe character circumſtance Demetrius Phalereus deſcription deſign Dryden Dunciad elegant Engliſh epiſtle Eſſay eſt Euripides excellent expreſſed expreſſion faid fame fatire fays finiſhed firſt fome genius Hiſtory Horace houſe humour imitation infert intereſting juſt laſt letter lines Lord Lord Bolingbroke Lucretius malè Milton moſt muſe muſt nature obſerved occafion paffion paſſage paſſion perſon philoſopher piece pleaſing pleaſure poem poet poetry POPE Pope's preſent publiſhed purpoſe Quintilian raiſe reaſon repreſented reſpect reſt ſaid ſame ſatire ſays ſcarce SCENA ſecond ſee ſeems ſeen ſenſe ſenſible ſentiments ſerve ſeveral ſhall ſhe ſhew ſhould ſome ſometimes ſon ſpeak ſpecies ſpirit ſtate Statius ſtill ſtory ſtriking ſtrong ſtudy ſtyle ſubject ſuch ſuppoſed Swift taſte theſe thing thoſe tranflation univerſal uſed uſual verſe Virgil Voltaire whoſe words writer δε