Classical Influences on English PoetryAllen & Unwin, 1951 - 271 من الصفحات This book discusses the literary influences of the classics on different genres of English poetry. |
من داخل الكتاب
النتائج 1-3 من 9
الصفحة 198
... Persius , who for the most part formed his style on that of Horace , elaborates it with Meredithian self- consciousness . He had beyond a doubt studied Lucilius , and he may have thought that Horace , in refining the crudities of ...
... Persius , who for the most part formed his style on that of Horace , elaborates it with Meredithian self- consciousness . He had beyond a doubt studied Lucilius , and he may have thought that Horace , in refining the crudities of ...
الصفحة 210
... Persius , who composed , about half a century after Horace , a few satires , which were published after his early death . It is difficult to say what makes a book succeed . The style of Persius is so harsh , mannered and obscure that ...
... Persius , who composed , about half a century after Horace , a few satires , which were published after his early death . It is difficult to say what makes a book succeed . The style of Persius is so harsh , mannered and obscure that ...
الصفحة 213
... Persius is , he was more imitable than Horace . It is pretty clear that he had some influence on Donne , though direct imitation is absent . There was some spiritual affinity between them in their determination . to put harsh truths ...
... Persius is , he was more imitable than Horace . It is pretty clear that he had some influence on Donne , though direct imitation is absent . There was some spiritual affinity between them in their determination . to put harsh truths ...
المحتوى
PREFACE page | 7 |
The Epic | 9 |
The Epic Tradition in Antiquity | 30 |
حقوق النشر | |
10 من الأقسام الأخرى غير ظاهرة
طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
Achilles admired Aeneas Aeneid Aeschinus ancient atque called Catullus century character Chaucer classical comedy comes couplet course Creon criticism death Demea didactic doubt drama Dryden Eclogues elegiac elegy Elizabethan English poetry epic epigrams famous feel Georgics give gods Greek haec Hector heroic Hesiod Homer Horace Horatian Idylls Iliad imitated influence Juvenal kind king Latin least lines literary literature Lucan Lucilius lyrical matter mediaeval Menaechmus metre Micio middle ages mihi Milton mind modern natural neque never odes Odyssey Oedipus original Ovid Paradise Lost passage pastoral perhaps Persius Pharsalia Pindar Plautus play poem poetic poets Pope quae quid quod reader renaissance rhetoric Roman satire satirist scholar Seneca Shakespeare Shelley shepherd stanzas Statius story style Tennyson Terence thee Theocritus thing thir thou tibi tion traditional tragedy translation Trojans Troy true verse Virgil words writing written Zeus