Literary Criticism of Seventeenth-century EnglandEdward W. Tayler Knopf, 1967 - 427 من الصفحات |
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الصفحة 13
... poetic double talk is , in effect , a dramatic embodiment of the critical dictum that Jonson shared with Milton , that the good poet must first of all be the good man , who " ought him selfe to bee a true Poem . " The practice of sacred ...
... poetic double talk is , in effect , a dramatic embodiment of the critical dictum that Jonson shared with Milton , that the good poet must first of all be the good man , who " ought him selfe to bee a true Poem . " The practice of sacred ...
الصفحة 14
... poems , as in Chapman's " A Coronet for his Mistresse Philosophie " or Donne's " La Corona " ) and " Chaplet " ( meaning wreath and prayer and poem ) establishes yet another signification for " my curious frame " : Marvell's poem itself ...
... poems , as in Chapman's " A Coronet for his Mistresse Philosophie " or Donne's " La Corona " ) and " Chaplet " ( meaning wreath and prayer and poem ) establishes yet another signification for " my curious frame " : Marvell's poem itself ...
الصفحة 285
... Poem , Gondibert and Oswald , me thinks the Fable is not much unlike the Theatre . For so , from severall and farre distant Sources , do the lesser Brooks of Lom- bardy , flowing into one another , fall all at last into the two main ...
... Poem , Gondibert and Oswald , me thinks the Fable is not much unlike the Theatre . For so , from severall and farre distant Sources , do the lesser Brooks of Lom- bardy , flowing into one another , fall all at last into the two main ...
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admirable Aeneid alwayes ancient Apollo Aristotle Author Beauty better body Book call'd Cicero conceit Cowley criticism delight discourse divine Donne doth Dryden English Euripides excellent expression Fable Fame Fancy farre fitnesse Francis Bacon generall Gods Gondibert grace Greek hath heaven Hesiod Homer honour Horace imitation invention Jonson Joshua Sylvester judgement kind knowledge labour language Latin learned lesse lines literary manner matter meane meere metaphysical poets mind Muse naturall Nature neoclassicism never noble Orpheus Ovid perfect Petrarch Philosophers Plato Plautus Poem Poesie poetic Poetry Poets praise prose Quintilian Reader reason Renaissance Rime Ryme Samuel Daniel sayes selfe sense severall shew Sophocles Soul speake spirit stile thee thereof things thou thought tion tongue Tragedy translation true Truth verse vertue Virgil vulgar wayes wherein wisdome wise words writ write Zoroaster