The Age of Wit, 1650-1750Macmillan, 1966 - 348 strani |
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Zadetki 1–3 od 41
Stran 154
... rules , reason rather than judgment was regarded as the necessary check to fancy , and observance of the rules was ipso facto evidence of the presence of reason . The fashion for rules was of a much shorter duration than the championing ...
... rules , reason rather than judgment was regarded as the necessary check to fancy , and observance of the rules was ipso facto evidence of the presence of reason . The fashion for rules was of a much shorter duration than the championing ...
Stran 156
... rules continued into the eighteenth century . Charles Gildon , in his Complete Art of Poetry ( 1718 ) , equated art with the rules and nature with wit . To effect a fusion , he quoted the translation by the Earl of Roscommon of the Ars ...
... rules continued into the eighteenth century . Charles Gildon , in his Complete Art of Poetry ( 1718 ) , equated art with the rules and nature with wit . To effect a fusion , he quoted the translation by the Earl of Roscommon of the Ars ...
Stran 158
... rules came from the principle of beauty itself , for most poets found it impossible to explain all of the ... rules of the ancients . The rules were also challenged by the argument that reason was after all limited . Thomas Rymer's ...
... rules came from the principle of beauty itself , for most poets found it impossible to explain all of the ... rules of the ancients . The rules were also challenged by the argument that reason was after all limited . Thomas Rymer's ...
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Abraham Cowley Addison Age of Wit Alexander Pope Augustan Reprint Society Beauty Bishop Sprat Blackmore called chap comedy concept context conversation Country Wife Cowley decorum Dennis Discourse Dryden dull Dunciad Earl English epigram Essay on Criticism expression extravagant faculty faculty psychology false wit fancy figures Flecknoe fool genius Gulliver Hobbes HORNER Houyhnhnms humor imagination intellectual irreligion John John Dryden Jonathan Swift kind of wit LADY FIDGET laugh learning letter literary little wits London Longinus manner meaning ment metaphor metaphysical metaphysical poets mind moral nature neoclassical ornamentation play poem poet poetic Poetry Pope popular Preface to Valentinian pretenders propriety psychology raillery reason Republic of Wit rhetorical ridicule rules satire secret grace sect sense seventeenth century Shadwell Shaftesbury Spectator Spingarn spirit style sublime Swift Tatler things Thomas Hobbes thought tion true wit truth turn vice Wit and Humour wit's witty Wolseley words writing wrote