Literary Criticism in England, 1660-1800Gerald Wester Chapman Knopf, 1966 - 618 من الصفحات |
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الصفحة 22
... verse . The verse which the Greeks and Latins , considering the nature of their own languages , found by experience most grave , and for an epic poem most decent , was their hexameter , a verse limited not only in the length of the line ...
... verse . The verse which the Greeks and Latins , considering the nature of their own languages , found by experience most grave , and for an epic poem most decent , was their hexameter , a verse limited not only in the length of the line ...
الصفحة 110
... verse and calls it a heroic poem ; his subject is trivial but his verse is noble . I doubt not but he had Virgil in his eye , for we find many admirable imitations of him and some parodies . . . . This , I think , my Lord , to be the ...
... verse and calls it a heroic poem ; his subject is trivial but his verse is noble . I doubt not but he had Virgil in his eye , for we find many admirable imitations of him and some parodies . . . . This , I think , my Lord , to be the ...
الصفحة 115
... verse which we call heroic , was either not known or not always practiced in Chaucer's age . It were an easy matter to produce some thousands of his verses which are lame for want of half a foot , and sometimes a whole one , and which ...
... verse which we call heroic , was either not known or not always practiced in Chaucer's age . It were an easy matter to produce some thousands of his verses which are lame for want of half a foot , and sometimes a whole one , and which ...
المحتوى
INTRODUCTION | 3 |
John Locke | 29 |
JOHN DRYDEN 16311700 | 37 |
حقوق النشر | |
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action Addison admiration Aeneid ancient appear Aristotle audience beauty Ben Jonson called character comedy common composition criticism delight discourse dramatic Dryden effect eighteenth century English epic epic poetry Essay Essay on Criticism excellence expression Falstaff fancy Francis Hutcheson French genius give Gondibert heroic Hobbes Homer Horace Hudibras human humor ideas Iliad images imagination imitation Johnson Joseph Warton judge judgment Juvenal kind language laughter learning living mankind manner means Milton mind modern moral nation nature neoclassic neoclassicism never numbers objects observed opinion original Ovid painting Paradise Lost particular passions perfect perhaps persons philosophers play pleased pleasure poem poesy poet poetical poetry Pope principles produce reader reason resemblance rhyme ridiculous rules satire scenes sense sentiments Shakespeare Silent Woman sometimes spirit sublime taste theory things thought tion tragedy true truth verse Virgil virtue words writing