An Essay on Epic Poetry: In Five Epistles to the Revd. Mr. Mason. With Notes ...J. Dodsley, 1782 - 298 psl. |
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126 psl.
... remarkable for the mildest manners and most amiable difpofition ; totally free from that imperious and bigotted attachment to fpeculative opinions , which the science he cultivated is so apt to produce . He endeared himself to Boileau ...
... remarkable for the mildest manners and most amiable difpofition ; totally free from that imperious and bigotted attachment to fpeculative opinions , which the science he cultivated is so apt to produce . He endeared himself to Boileau ...
134 psl.
... remarkable fact . In no polished nation , after Criticism has been much studied , and the rules of writ- ing established , has any very extraordinary work ever appeared . This has visibly been the cafe in Greece , in Rome , and in ...
... remarkable fact . In no polished nation , after Criticism has been much studied , and the rules of writ- ing established , has any very extraordinary work ever appeared . This has visibly been the cafe in Greece , in Rome , and in ...
135 psl.
... remarkable fact may indeed be found true , I should rather suppose it to arife from the irritable nature of the poetic fpirit , fo peculiarly averse to restraint and controul . The Bard who could gallop his Pegasus over a free and open ...
... remarkable fact may indeed be found true , I should rather suppose it to arife from the irritable nature of the poetic fpirit , fo peculiarly averse to restraint and controul . The Bard who could gallop his Pegasus over a free and open ...
140 psl.
... remarkable for their severity and injuftice : nor is it furprifing , that the nation which has difplayed the fainteft fparks of Epic fire , fhould be the most folici- tous to reduce the oppreffive fplendor of this exalted luminary . The ...
... remarkable for their severity and injuftice : nor is it furprifing , that the nation which has difplayed the fainteft fparks of Epic fire , fhould be the most folici- tous to reduce the oppreffive fplendor of this exalted luminary . The ...
148 psl.
... number , the Hiftorian himself informs us in the following remarkable sentence , Atilla mater Annæi Lucani , fine abfolutione , fine fupplicio Atilla 148 NOTES TO THE tion of freedom. In the fequel of his narration...
... number , the Hiftorian himself informs us in the following remarkable sentence , Atilla mater Annæi Lucani , fine abfolutione , fine fupplicio Atilla 148 NOTES TO THE tion of freedom. In the fequel of his narration...
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An Essay on Epic Poetry– In Five Epistles to the Revd. Mr. Mason. With Notes ... William Hayley Visos knygos peržiūra - 1782 |
An Essay on Epic Poetry– In Five Epistles to the Revd. Mr. Mason ..., 1 tomas William Hayley Visos knygos peržiūra - 1782 |
An Essay on Epic Poetry– In Five Epistles to the Revd. Mr. Mason. With Notes ... William Hayley Visos knygos peržiūra - 1782 |
Pagrindiniai terminai ir frazės
Æneid afferts againſt Araucanians Bard bleft Boccacio breaſt CANTO Caupolican celebrated Chieftains cloſe compofition confiderable courſe Critic Dante darkneſs death defign defire deſcribed difplayed diſcover Engliſh Epic poem Epic poetry EPISTLE Ercilla eſcape eyes faid fame Fancy Fancy's fate fays feems fhall fingular fink fire firft firſt foldiers fome fond foon foul fplendid ftill ftrikes fubject fublime fuch fufficiently fuperior fuppofed Genius heart Heroic herſelf himſelf Homer honour Indian juft juſt Lantaro laſt Lope de Vega Lucan lyre mind moft moſt Mufe muft Muſe muſt noble NOTE numbers o'er occafion paffage paffed paffion Petrarch pleaſe pleaſure Poet poetical poetry praiſe prefent pride purſue raiſe reafon ſcene ſeems ſhall ſhe ſhould ſome Spaniards Spaniſh ſpeak ſpirit ſpread ſtate ſtill ſuch thee thefe themſelves theſe thofe thoſe thou thro Tucapel uſe verfe Verſe Virgil Voltaire whofe whoſe William of Apulia
Populiarios ištraukos
194 psl. - Caron dimonio con occhi di bragia Loro accennando tutte le raccoglie ; Batte col remo qualunque s
134 psl. - ... that philosophical, that geometrical, and systematical spirit so much in vogue, which has spread itself from the sciences even into polite literature, by consulting only reason, has not diminished and destroyed sentiment ; and made our poets write from and to the head, rather than the heart...
192 psl. - Ed ecco verso noi venir per nave Un vecchio, bianco per antico pelo, Gridando: Guai a voi, anime prave: Non isperate mai veder lo cielo: l' vegno per menarvi all' altra riva Nelle tenebre eterne, in caldo e in gielo. E tu, che se' costì, anima viva, Partiti da cotesti che son morti.
92 psl. - And turn'd each fairer image in his brain To blank confusion and her crazy train, 'Twas thine, with constant love, through...
294 psl. - ... late critics have taken with them), I know not what other expedients the epic poet might have...
184 psl. - Di questo impedimento ov' io ti mando, Si che duro giudicio lassù frange. Questa chiese Lucia in suo dimando, K disse: Or abbisogna il tuo fedele Di te, ed io a te lo raccomando. Lucia, nimica -di ciascun crudele, Si mosse, e venne al loco dov
120 psl. - Milton was the emulator of both. He found Homer possessed of the province of MORALITY ; Virgil of POLITICS : and nothing left for him, but that of RELIGION.
172 psl. - Guardai in alto e vidi le sue spalle Vestite già de' raggi del pianeta Che mena dritto altrui per ogni calle.
57 psl. - NAVAL POET'S laureate head. Ye Nymphs of Tagus, from your golden cell, That caught the echo of his tuneful...
211 psl. - Voltaire himself and others, but the positive en:husiasm and the omission of any real negative criticism are new. Indeed, after making these statements, Hayley proceeds to translate almost 900 lines of the poem. The Essay on Epic Poetry soon came to be regarded...