Studies in English LiteratureEdward Stanford, 1883 - 444 էջ |
From inside the book
Արդյունքներ 24–ի 1-ից 5-ը:
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... some of the leading advocates of a new order in poetry were unable to appreciate his genius . Southey told Rogers that he had read Spenser through Thus about thirty times , and that he could not read B 2 ALEXANDER POPE . 3.
... some of the leading advocates of a new order in poetry were unable to appreciate his genius . Southey told Rogers that he had read Spenser through Thus about thirty times , and that he could not read B 2 ALEXANDER POPE . 3.
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... . The warmest enthusiast for Spenser , Keats , and Shelley has but a narrow judgment of poetry if he cannot also admire the sonorous verse of Dryden , or the consummate art - an art which in itself is genius - ALEXANDER POPE . 5.
... . The warmest enthusiast for Spenser , Keats , and Shelley has but a narrow judgment of poetry if he cannot also admire the sonorous verse of Dryden , or the consummate art - an art which in itself is genius - ALEXANDER POPE . 5.
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... Spenser and Words- worth see with the eye of faith : " The light that never was on sea or land The consecration and the Poet's dream . " Of the early poems of Pope the most noteworthy is the Essay on Criticism . ' It is said to have ...
... Spenser and Words- worth see with the eye of faith : " The light that never was on sea or land The consecration and the Poet's dream . " Of the early poems of Pope the most noteworthy is the Essay on Criticism . ' It is said to have ...
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... Spenser is not famous for wit , or Butler for pathos . We go to Shelley , and not to Crabbe , for splendid bursts of imagination ; we do not expect ( M. Taine notwithstanding ) an accurate description of natural objects from Pope , nor ...
... Spenser is not famous for wit , or Butler for pathos . We go to Shelley , and not to Crabbe , for splendid bursts of imagination ; we do not expect ( M. Taine notwithstanding ) an accurate description of natural objects from Pope , nor ...
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... Spenser's great poem , between Thomas Warton and Huggins , the translator of ' Ariosto , ' in which the latter exclaimed , “ I will militate no longer against his nescience . " Huggins , " so writes Boswell , was master of the subject ...
... Spenser's great poem , between Thomas Warton and Huggins , the translator of ' Ariosto , ' in which the latter exclaimed , “ I will militate no longer against his nescience . " Huggins , " so writes Boswell , was master of the subject ...
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Addison adds admirable beauty Ben Jonson biographer called century character charm Coleridge contemporaries couplet Cowper critic death Defoe Defoe's delight descriptive doubt Dunciad Elwin English poetry Essay expressed exquisite Faery Queene fame familiar famous fancy fault feeling genius happy heart highest honour humour imagination Johnson Joseph Warton judgment labour Lady language letters lines literary literature lived Lord Lord Bolingbroke Lord Macaulay lover lyric poet Matthew Prior memory Milton Moll Flanders nature never noble observes opinion passages passion pastoral perhaps piece poem poet's poetical Pope Pope's praise Prior produced prose Queen Queen Anne reader regard remarkable remember Robinson Crusoe rural satire scarcely Scott Shakespeare song sonnets Southey Southey's Spenser Steele Steele's style sweet Swift Tatler Thomas Warton thou thought tion Twickenham uttered verse volume Wesley Wesley's words Wordsworth writes written wrote