An Essay on the Genius and Writings of Pope, Volume 1Garland Pub., 1970 - 334 pagina's |
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Pagina 132
... death itself . It is obfervable that this cir cumftance did not occur to POPE * , when he endeavoured to justify ... deaths of their respective ...
... death itself . It is obfervable that this cir cumftance did not occur to POPE * , when he endeavoured to justify ... deaths of their respective ...
Pagina 341
... death , See my lips tremble , and my eyeballs roll— And then a circumftance of perfonal fond- pess intervenes , Suck my last breath , and catch the flying foul ! But the inftantly corrects herself , and would have her Abelard attend her ...
... death , See my lips tremble , and my eyeballs roll— And then a circumftance of perfonal fond- pess intervenes , Suck my last breath , and catch the flying foul ! But the inftantly corrects herself , and would have her Abelard attend her ...
Pagina 342
... death of Abelard , are poetically imagined , and are also agreeable to the notions of mystic de- votion . The death of St. Jerome is finely painted by DOMENICHINO , with fuch at- tendant particulars . In trance ecstatic may thy pangs be ...
... death of Abelard , are poetically imagined , and are also agreeable to the notions of mystic de- votion . The death of St. Jerome is finely painted by DOMENICHINO , with fuch at- tendant particulars . In trance ecstatic may thy pangs be ...
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An Essay on the Genius and Writings of Pope, Vol. 1 of 2 (Classic Reprint) Joseph Warton Geen voorbeeld beschikbaar - 2018 |
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Abelard Addiſon Æneid alfo almoſt alſo ancient beautiful becauſe beſt Boileau Cant character Chaucer circumſtances cloſely compofition Corneille criticiſm defcribed defign deſcription Dryden Eclogue Effay elegant Eloifa epic poetry epiftle Euripides excellent expreffed expreffion exquifite faid fame fatire fays fecond feems fentiments fhall firft firſt folemn fome fpecies ftrokes ftrong fubject fublime fuch fufficiently fylphs genius greateſt himſelf hiſtory Homer Iliad images imagination inftance itſelf Jane Shore juſt laft laſt loft Milton moft moſt mufic muſt nature numbers o'er obfervations occafion Ovid paffage paffion perfon Petrarch piece Pindar pleaſed pleaſure poefy poem poet poetical poetry POPE praiſes prefent profe publiſhed Quintilian Racine reaſon reprefented ſaid ſay ſcene ſeems ſeen ſhall ſhe ſhould ſome Sophocles ſpeak ſpecies ſpirit ſtanza ſtill ſtory ſtriking ſuch taſte thefe themſelves Theocritus theſe thofe thoſe thought tion tragedy tranflated uſed verfes verſe Virgil Voltaire whofe whoſe writer