Jonathan Swift: Essays on His Satire and Other StudiesOxford University Press, 1964 - 292 páginas |
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Página 114
... verse - Pindaric Odes in which he seems to have wished to compete with Cowley and ex- periments in heroic verse like the Lines addressed to Congreve , not much less restrained in manner . He soon discovered that such forms would not fit ...
... verse - Pindaric Odes in which he seems to have wished to compete with Cowley and ex- periments in heroic verse like the Lines addressed to Congreve , not much less restrained in manner . He soon discovered that such forms would not fit ...
Página 187
... Verses , most of them never before printed . " But it is perhaps equally reasonable to suppose that Swift definitely ... verse because it was easier than to write prose . The doggerel trifles that he and Sheridan tossed off together were ...
... Verses , most of them never before printed . " But it is perhaps equally reasonable to suppose that Swift definitely ... verse because it was easier than to write prose . The doggerel trifles that he and Sheridan tossed off together were ...
Página 188
... verse for his roughest and least considered outbursts , tossing off ballads and broadsides shaped to popular tunes , so in his friend- ships his most familiar manner of address was always in verse . What could be more familiar - and at ...
... verse for his roughest and least considered outbursts , tossing off ballads and broadsides shaped to popular tunes , so in his friend- ships his most familiar manner of address was always in verse . What could be more familiar - and at ...
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Términos y frases comunes
A. E. Housman amusement appeared attack Augustan Brobdingnag Cadenus comedy common concerned conciseness Congreve conversation court critics Dean Dean Swift death Denis Johnston Dryden Dublin edition England English Essay Esther Johnson fashion folly friends friendship give Gulliver Gulliver's Travels hath honour Houyhnhnms human humour Ibid Ireland Irish irony Isaac Bickerstaff Jonathan Swift Journal to Stella King Lady language later learned Lemuel Gulliver letters literary London Lord Mankind manner ment method mind ministers Muse Nature never parody passion pedantry perhaps person poem poetry poets political Pope printed Prose quote raillery readers reason reason sleeps romantic satirist seems sense sentiment sermon seventeenth century Sheridan Sir William Temple society style Swift's satire Tale Tatler things thought tion tone Tory turned Vanessa verse Virtue Whig whole words writing written