The Art of Literary CriticismD. Appleton-Century Company, incorporated, 1941 - 689 strani |
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Zadetki 1–3 od 91
Stran 208
... verse , may want it as much in rhyme : and he who has it will avoid errors in both kinds . Latin verse was as great a confinement to the imagination of those poets , as rhyme to ours ; and yet you find Ovid saying too much on every ...
... verse , may want it as much in rhyme : and he who has it will avoid errors in both kinds . Latin verse was as great a confinement to the imagination of those poets , as rhyme to ours ; and yet you find Ovid saying too much on every ...
Stran 209
... verse by the same reason ? If the words of some poets who write in it are either ill chosen , or ill placed , which makes not only rhyme , but all kind of verse in any language un- natural , 1 shall I , for their vicious affectation ...
... verse by the same reason ? If the words of some poets who write in it are either ill chosen , or ill placed , which makes not only rhyme , but all kind of verse in any language un- natural , 1 shall I , for their vicious affectation ...
Stran 210
... verse so tedious : for though , most commonly , the sense is to be confined to the cou- plet , yet nothing that does perpetuo tenore fluere , run in the same channel , can please always . ' Tis like the murmuring of a stream , which not ...
... verse so tedious : for though , most commonly , the sense is to be confined to the cou- plet , yet nothing that does perpetuo tenore fluere , run in the same channel , can please always . ' Tis like the murmuring of a stream , which not ...
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action admiration Æneid Æschylus ancient appear Aristotle artist beauty Ben Jonson blank verse called character charm Chaucer classic comedy composition criticism delight Demosthenes diction divine dramatic Dryden effect English epic Epic poetry essay Euripides excellent excitement expression eyes fancy feeling French genius give Goethe Greek hath heart Homer Horace human idea Iliad imagination imitation judgment kind language Laocoön less literary literature living Longinus manner matter means ment metre mind modern Molière moral nature never novel object painting passion perfect persons philosopher Pindar Plato play pleasure plot poem poesy poet poet's poetic poetry praise produced prose Quintilian reader reason rhyme rules Sainte-Beuve scene sense Shakespeare Sophocles soul speak spirit style sublime taste things thought tion tragedy translation true truth verse Virgil whole words Wordsworth write