Critical Essays on Dramatic PoetryRobert Urie, 1761 - 195 psl. |
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... English merchant . fixed to the tragedy of Zara . Of delicacy and decency in tragedy , etc. Pre- 56 In a fecond letter to Sir Everard Falkener , ambaf- fador at Conftantinople . Taken from the fecond edition of Zara . 65 Of the ...
... English merchant . fixed to the tragedy of Zara . Of delicacy and decency in tragedy , etc. Pre- 56 In a fecond letter to Sir Everard Falkener , ambaf- fador at Conftantinople . Taken from the fecond edition of Zara . 65 Of the ...
psl.
... English in their theatrical entertainments . In a preface to the tragedy of Caefar , 1738 . 129 A differtation on antient and modern tragedy . Addreffed to his eminence cardinal Querini , a noble Venetian , bishop of Brescia , and li ...
... English in their theatrical entertainments . In a preface to the tragedy of Caefar , 1738 . 129 A differtation on antient and modern tragedy . Addreffed to his eminence cardinal Querini , a noble Venetian , bishop of Brescia , and li ...
1 psl.
... English profe , the first act of this play , pretty much in the fame manner as it now ftands in * Prefixed to his Tragedy of Brutus . There is an English Brutus by an author named Lee ; but it is a perfornmance unknown , and never ...
... English profe , the first act of this play , pretty much in the fame manner as it now ftands in * Prefixed to his Tragedy of Brutus . There is an English Brutus by an author named Lee ; but it is a perfornmance unknown , and never ...
2 psl.
... English writer had handled this fubject , which is so extremely well adapted to your theatre . You emboldened me to continue a subject so susceptible of great fentiments . Give me leave then , my lord , to offer you Brutus , though ...
... English writer had handled this fubject , which is so extremely well adapted to your theatre . You emboldened me to continue a subject so susceptible of great fentiments . Give me leave then , my lord , to offer you Brutus , though ...
3 psl.
... English poet , I used to fay , is a free man , who subjects his language to his genius ; the Frenchman is a conftant flave to rhime , often obliged to write four verf es to convey a thought , which in English can be expressed in one ...
... English poet , I used to fay , is a free man , who subjects his language to his genius ; the Frenchman is a conftant flave to rhime , often obliged to write four verf es to convey a thought , which in English can be expressed in one ...
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Æneid againſt alfo almoſt alſo Alzira anſwered antient Athens beauties becauſe beſt Boileau Brutus Caefar cardinal Richelieu cauſe Chineſe Cinna comedy Corneille cuſtom defire English eſteem Euripides expreffed expreffion faid fame fatire fatisfied faults fcene feems fentiments fhall fhew fhould fimple fimplicity fince firft firſt fome fometimes fpeak fpectators France French ftage ftill fubject fuccefs fuch fuperior genius greateſt Greeks Guife hiftory himſelf honour intereſting itſelf knowlege laſt leaſt lefs madam manner Mariamne maſters Merope moft Moliere monfieur moſt Motte muft muſt myſelf nation nature neceffary notwithſtanding Oedipus paffion Paris perfons Phaedra philofopher piece play pleafing pleaſe pleaſure poet poetry prefent profe publiſhed Racine racter raiſe reaſon refpects repreſentation repreſented ſay ſcene ſeeing ſeems Semiramis ſeveral ſome Sophocles ſpeak ſtage ſtill tafte taſte theatre thefe themſelves theſe thofe thoſe tragedy tragic tranflated uſe verfe verſes Virgil Voltaire whofe whoſe write wrote Zara
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