A History of English Poetry, Volumen5Macmillan, 1962 |
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Página 114
... kind that Johnson and Cowper imagine : his purpose , as he shows us , was simply to defend women against the charge of being fickle in their affections , and this he does in the directest way by a kind of " Tenson , " after the ...
... kind that Johnson and Cowper imagine : his purpose , as he shows us , was simply to defend women against the charge of being fickle in their affections , and this he does in the directest way by a kind of " Tenson , " after the ...
Página 207
... kind ; With cool submission joins the lab'ring train , And social sorrow loses half its pain . And that to A Word to the Wise ( a play which had been formerly damned ) appeals to the common humanity of the audience , as follows : - To ...
... kind ; With cool submission joins the lab'ring train , And social sorrow loses half its pain . And that to A Word to the Wise ( a play which had been formerly damned ) appeals to the common humanity of the audience , as follows : - To ...
Página 447
... kind . Both grew up under very similar social conditions ; both dwindled in the same kind of social atmosphere . Both were the offspring of religious institutions ; both were brought to perfection of form in an age when society had ...
... kind . Both grew up under very similar social conditions ; both dwindled in the same kind of social atmosphere . Both were the offspring of religious institutions ; both were brought to perfection of form in an age when society had ...
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Términos y frases comunes
Addison admiration afterwards Ambrose Philips ancient appeared blank verse Boileau Canto character Charles charms Christian Church Classical Renaissance Coffee-houses College Court criticism death delight diction Dryden Dunciad eighteenth century England English poetry epic Epistle Essay Essay on Criticism expression eyes fame French genius Granville Greek hand heaven heroic couplet honour Horace humour Iliad imagination imitation inspired Italy Joseph Warton kind King King Arthur Latin latter liberty lines literary live Lord Louis XIV lyric manner mind mock-heroic Montague moral Muse nation nature numbers o'er panegyrical Pastorals Philips Physicians Pindar poem poet poetical political Pope Pope's praise principle Prior published Queen reader reign religion Revolution of 1688 Rolliad Roman satire seems society soul Spectator spirit style Swift taste Tatler thee Thomas Parnell thou thought tion translation turn verse Virgil virtue Walpole Whig William writing written wrote