Lectures on the English Poets |
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LECTURE IV ON DRYDEN AND POPE DRYDEN and Pope are the great masters of the artificial style of poetry in our language , as the poets of whom I have already treated , Chaucer , Spenser , Shakespeare , and Milton , were of the natural ...
LECTURE IV ON DRYDEN AND POPE DRYDEN and Pope are the great masters of the artificial style of poetry in our language , as the poets of whom I have already treated , Chaucer , Spenser , Shakespeare , and Milton , were of the natural ...
Página 165
plain ; the sesquipedalia verba have this advantage , that they are all of one length ; and any words are equally fit for a learned style , so that we have never heard them before . Themistocles thought that the same sounding epithets ...
plain ; the sesquipedalia verba have this advantage , that they are all of one length ; and any words are equally fit for a learned style , so that we have never heard them before . Themistocles thought that the same sounding epithets ...
Página 166
facilities afforded by this style of imposing generalization is , that it was instantly adopted with success by all those who were writers by profession , or who were not ; and that , at present , we cannot see a lottery puff , or a ...
facilities afforded by this style of imposing generalization is , that it was instantly adopted with success by all those who were writers by profession , or who were not ; and that , at present , we cannot see a lottery puff , or a ...
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Contenido
LECTURE | 1 |
ON CHAUCER AND SPENSER | 31 |
ON SHAKESPEARE AND MILTON | 67 |
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Términos y frases comunes
admiration affectation appear artificial beauty better character circumstances comes common critic death delight describes equal excellence expression face fancy feeling flowers force forms genius give given hand happy head heart highest hire hope human idea images imagination impression instance interest kind language leaves less light lines living look Lord Byron manners mean Milton mind moral Muse nature never objects once original painted pass passion perhaps persons play pleasure poem poet poetical poetry Pope present produced reader reason respect round seems sense sentiment Shakespeare soul sound speak Spenser spirit spring story style sweet tell things thou thought tree true truth turn verse whole wind wish writer