The SpectatorGeorge Routledge, 1870 - 919 pagina's |
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Pagina v
... Virgil and Horace , had brought natural thought and speech to their perfection . In the preceding labour for the rectify- ing of the language , preference had been given to French words of Latin origin . French being one of those ...
... Virgil and Horace , had brought natural thought and speech to their perfection . In the preceding labour for the rectify- ing of the language , preference had been given to French words of Latin origin . French being one of those ...
Pagina vii
... Virgil . We see it also in some of the criticisms which accompany his admirable working out of the resolve to justify his true natural admiration of the poetry of Milton , ' by showing that Paradise Lost was planned after the manner of ...
... Virgil . We see it also in some of the criticisms which accompany his admirable working out of the resolve to justify his true natural admiration of the poetry of Milton , ' by showing that Paradise Lost was planned after the manner of ...
Pagina ix
... Virgil's Italy , ' the land of the great writers in Latin , and finding scenery or customs of the people elo- quent of them at every turn . He crammed his pages with quotation from Virgil and b Horace , Ovid and Tibullus , Propertius ...
... Virgil's Italy , ' the land of the great writers in Latin , and finding scenery or customs of the people elo- quent of them at every turn . He crammed his pages with quotation from Virgil and b Horace , Ovid and Tibullus , Propertius ...
Pagina x
... Virgil ; while his heart was in the closing em- phasis , also proper to the occasion , which dwelt on the liberty that gives their smile to the barren rocks and bleak mountains of Britannia's isle , while for Italy , rich in the unex ...
... Virgil ; while his heart was in the closing em- phasis , also proper to the occasion , which dwelt on the liberty that gives their smile to the barren rocks and bleak mountains of Britannia's isle , while for Italy , rich in the unex ...
Pagina 13
... Virgil , we shall find that the English Writers , in their way of thinking and expressing them- selves , resemble those Authors much more than the modern Italians pretend to do . And as for the Poet himself from whom the Dreams of this ...
... Virgil , we shall find that the English Writers , in their way of thinking and expressing them- selves , resemble those Authors much more than the modern Italians pretend to do . And as for the Poet himself from whom the Dreams of this ...
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