The feast of the poets, with notes, and other pieces in verse, by the editor of The Examiner. The dedication signed: Leigh HuntLondon, 1815 |
من داخل الكتاب
النتائج 1-5 من 7
الصفحة xiii
... satire , in those times , appears to have mistaken for a vigorous negligence or gallant undress . But the author is getting on his criti- cal ground again , and forgets that he must now be regarded as having entered his own road of ...
... satire , in those times , appears to have mistaken for a vigorous negligence or gallant undress . But the author is getting on his criti- cal ground again , and forgets that he must now be regarded as having entered his own road of ...
الصفحة 25
... Satire , he asks in a note on that passage To tell men freely of their foulest faults , * To laugh at their vain deeds and vainer thoughts , " Would Dryden have pardoned such a rhyme ? " It would appear so , for he used it repeatedly ...
... Satire , he asks in a note on that passage To tell men freely of their foulest faults , * To laugh at their vain deeds and vainer thoughts , " Would Dryden have pardoned such a rhyme ? " It would appear so , for he used it repeatedly ...
الصفحة 37
... satire on himself and his versification ; for who can deny , that in the walks of his Muse Grove nods at grove - each alley has it's brother , And half the platform - just reflects the other ? As the present notes are written for the ...
... satire on himself and his versification ; for who can deny , that in the walks of his Muse Grove nods at grove - each alley has it's brother , And half the platform - just reflects the other ? As the present notes are written for the ...
الصفحة 58
... satire : -the merest folly he treats not only with ridicule but resentment ; and even a mistake , upon a point which he understands better than some unlucky commentator , is something upon which he thinks himself entitled to be ...
... satire : -the merest folly he treats not only with ridicule but resentment ; and even a mistake , upon a point which he understands better than some unlucky commentator , is something upon which he thinks himself entitled to be ...
الصفحة 70
... satirical , as in the School - Mistress and the Castle of Indolence , where the author looks through his seriousness with a smile , and the quaintnesses of the old poetry fall in with his lurking archness or his assumed importance . And ...
... satirical , as in the School - Mistress and the Castle of Indolence , where the author looks through his seriousness with a smile , and the quaintnesses of the old poetry fall in with his lurking archness or his assumed importance . And ...
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
abstrac admirers affected allusion alter Apollo appears beautiful better Bob Southey bow'd bright called Castle of Indolence character Coleridge court of Aldermen cried criticism Dryden elegant Eloisa to Abelard enjoyment exquisite eyes Fairfax fancy faults favourite Feast feeling flow'r forget friends genius Giaour give graceful harmony Hayley heart idle imitation Italian Jump-up-and-kiss-me Juvenal King Laureat laurels least LEIGH HUNT less lines look look'd Lord Byron Lyrical Ballads mind Montepulciano never notes o'er original passage passion perhaps persons Phoebus piece Pindar poem poet poetical poetry Pope praise prince PYRRHA readers respect rhyme ribaldry satire Scott seem'd seems sense Shakspeare shew simplicity singular Sirmio smiles society song speak Spenser and Milton spirit style taste thee thing thought tion trifling turn turn'd twas only Bob verses versification vex'd vulgar Walter Scott wine words Wordsworth writers written