Critical Essays on Dramatic PoetryL. Davis and C. Reymers, 1761 - 274 psl. |
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4 psl.
... pleasure , will be always ill received by them . If , among the pictures of Rubens or of Paul Veronefe , any body placed his own defigns in crayon , would he not be in the wrong to put himself in competition with these painters ? We are ...
... pleasure , will be always ill received by them . If , among the pictures of Rubens or of Paul Veronefe , any body placed his own defigns in crayon , would he not be in the wrong to put himself in competition with these painters ? We are ...
10 psl.
... pleasure I faw in London your tragedy of Julius Caefar , which has been the delight of your nation for a century and a half paft ! I do not indeed pretend to approve the barbarous irregularities with which it abounds . It is only ...
... pleasure I faw in London your tragedy of Julius Caefar , which has been the delight of your nation for a century and a half paft ! I do not indeed pretend to approve the barbarous irregularities with which it abounds . It is only ...
14 psl.
... pleasure , of which , we have not , at prefent , the least conception . 1 • 1 # 11 n'eft point de ferpent ni de monftre odieux ... ! Qui par l'art imité ne puiffe plaire aux yeux . : Boileau . * The moft hideous monfters , when nicely ...
... pleasure , of which , we have not , at prefent , the least conception . 1 • 1 # 11 n'eft point de ferpent ni de monftre odieux ... ! Qui par l'art imité ne puiffe plaire aux yeux . : Boileau . * The moft hideous monfters , when nicely ...
29 psl.
... pleasure : which I attri- bute , partly , to the advantage this tragedy has always met with , of being extremely well acted , and partly , to the folemnity and pathos of the fubject . Father Folard a jefuit , and Mr. de la Motte of the ...
... pleasure : which I attri- bute , partly , to the advantage this tragedy has always met with , of being extremely well acted , and partly , to the folemnity and pathos of the fubject . Father Folard a jefuit , and Mr. de la Motte of the ...
39 psl.
... pleasure which his plays afford me in propor- tion as he has , more or lefs , ftrictly obeyed this rule . Mr. de la Motte , not content to banish from the ftage these fundamenral laws , would fain al- fo exclude poetry from it , and ...
... pleasure which his plays afford me in propor- tion as he has , more or lefs , ftrictly obeyed this rule . Mr. de la Motte , not content to banish from the ftage these fundamenral laws , would fain al- fo exclude poetry from it , and ...
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Æneid affert againſt alfo almoſt alſo Alzira anſwered antient Athens beauties becauſe Brutus Caefar cardinal Richelieu cauſe Chineſe Cinna comedy Corneille cuſtom defire English eſteem Euripides expreffed expreffion faid fame fatire faults fcene fecond feems fentiments fhall fhew fimple fimplicity fince firft firſt fome fometimes foon fpectacle France French ftage ftill fubject fuccefs fuch fuperior gallantry genius greateſt Greeks himſelf hiſtory honour intereft intrigue introduce itſelf knowlege laft laſt leaſt lefs Mahomet manner Mariamne Merope moft moſt Motte mufic muſt myſelf nation nature neceffary notwithſtanding Oedipus paffion Paris perfonages perfons Phaedra philofopher piece play pleaſe pleaſure poet poetry prefent profe publiſhed Racine raiſe reaſon refpects repreſentation repreſented ſay ſcene ſee ſeems Semiramis ſeveral Shakeſpear ſhould ſome Sophocles ſpeak ſtage ſtill ſuch taſte theatre thefe themſelves theſe thofe thoſe three unities tragedy tragic tranflated uſe verfe verſe Voltaire whofe whoſe write wrote Zara