An Essay on the Genius and Writings of Pope, Volume 2 |
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Pagina 6
... have undergone the usual and unavoidable fate of satirical writings , that is , not to be tasted or understood , when the characters , the facts and the follies they stigmatize , are perilbed and • See Menagiana , Vol . I. p .
... have undergone the usual and unavoidable fate of satirical writings , that is , not to be tasted or understood , when the characters , the facts and the follies they stigmatize , are perilbed and • See Menagiana , Vol . I. p .
Pagina 20
+ See his verses to Drydėn , prefixed to the translation of Virgil . Lord Bolingbroke assured Pore , that Dryden often declared to him , that he got more from the Spanish critics alone , than from the Italian , French , and all other ...
+ See his verses to Drydėn , prefixed to the translation of Virgil . Lord Bolingbroke assured Pore , that Dryden often declared to him , that he got more from the Spanish critics alone , than from the Italian , French , and all other ...
Pagina 21
It were to be wished that no youth of genius were suffered cver to look • Richard Berenger , Efa . C 3 into Statius * , Lucan , Claudian , or Scocca. into See his address to the faries in the Edipas Coloncus AND WRITINGS OF POPE . 21.
It were to be wished that no youth of genius were suffered cver to look • Richard Berenger , Efa . C 3 into Statius * , Lucan , Claudian , or Scocca. into See his address to the faries in the Edipas Coloncus AND WRITINGS OF POPE . 21.
Pagina 26
See his address to the faries in the Edipas Coloncus of Sophocles , beginning at the words , Q TOTIILI Serratis , at verse 85 , down to verse 117. And afterwards , when he becomes more particularly acquainted with the banatoral cruelty ...
See his address to the faries in the Edipas Coloncus of Sophocles , beginning at the words , Q TOTIILI Serratis , at verse 85 , down to verse 117. And afterwards , when he becomes more particularly acquainted with the banatoral cruelty ...
Pagina 44
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 see Pindar's manner trulğ imitated , may read Masters's ...
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 see Pindar's manner trulğ imitated , may read Masters's ...
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added admirable affected alſo ancient appears beauty becauſe beſt Boileau called character Corneille court death Dryden elegant epiſtle equal excellent firſt force French genius give himſelf hiſtory Horace images imitation Italy king laſt late learned letter lines lively Lord manner mean mentioned Milton mind moral moſt muſt nature never obſerved once opinion original painted particularly paſſage perhaps perſon piece pleaſing pleaſure poem poet poetry Pope preſent publiſhed reader reaſon remarkable ridicule ſaid ſame ſatire ſays SCENA ſecond ſee ſeems ſhould ſome ſpeak ſpirit ſtrokes ſubject ſuch Swift taſte theſe thing thoſe thought true turn uſe verſes whole whoſe writer written wrote Young