William Cowper: Poet of ParadiseEvangelical Press, 1993 - 688 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 77
Página 253
... sense and reason , six or eight times or ten times over : 3. According to the shocking custom of modem music , different persons sung different words at one and the same moment ; an intolerable insult on common sense , and utterly ...
... sense and reason , six or eight times or ten times over : 3. According to the shocking custom of modem music , different persons sung different words at one and the same moment ; an intolerable insult on common sense , and utterly ...
Página 457
... sense , and only the full sense of the original . ' Cowper therefore recommends blank verse as the ideal verse form for this kind of work . Secondly , the translator should omit nothing and invent nothing . Fidelity is the very essence ...
... sense , and only the full sense of the original . ' Cowper therefore recommends blank verse as the ideal verse form for this kind of work . Secondly , the translator should omit nothing and invent nothing . Fidelity is the very essence ...
Página 539
... sense of their need of it , and consequently too stupid ever to ask it . They are also as poor as they are unfeeling , and were it possible that they could affect them- selves with a just sense and apprehension of their lapsed condition ...
... sense of their need of it , and consequently too stupid ever to ask it . They are also as poor as they are unfeeling , and were it possible that they could affect them- selves with a just sense and apprehension of their lapsed condition ...
Contenido
Biographical table | 9 |
The early years | 33 |
Apprentice to the law | 49 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 20 secciones no mostradas
Términos y frases comunes
asked became become began believed brother called cause Christ Christian church close concerning conversion cousin Cowper critics death Evangelical express fact faith feel felt friendship give given God's grace hand happy Hayley heart Hill hope hymns interest John John Newton Johnson kind knew Lady Hesketh language later least letter light lines live London look Lord lost Madan Mary matter means mind nature never Newton Olney once perhaps person poem poet poet's poetry poor praise preaching present published reason received referring seems sense sent Side soon spiritual suffered taken Task tells thee things thought told took translation true truth turned Unwin verse Weston William wish write written wrote young