The Poetical Works of Alexander PopeMacmillan, 1869 - Всего страниц: 505 |
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Стр. xx
... youth . ' ' Give me leave to tell you , ' he wrote to Pope as early as 1705 , ' that I know nobody so likely to equal ' Milton as the author of his earlier poems ' even at the age he wrote most of them , as yourself . ' It was Trumball ...
... youth . ' ' Give me leave to tell you , ' he wrote to Pope as early as 1705 , ' that I know nobody so likely to equal ' Milton as the author of his earlier poems ' even at the age he wrote most of them , as yourself . ' It was Trumball ...
Стр. xxviii
... youth of very unripe Toryism developed into a full - blown Whig . In former days he had ventured to produce a rival play to Addison's Cato ; but the success and virtue of the great Whig author had in the end made a com- plete conquest ...
... youth of very unripe Toryism developed into a full - blown Whig . In former days he had ventured to produce a rival play to Addison's Cato ; but the success and virtue of the great Whig author had in the end made a com- plete conquest ...
Стр. xxxiv
... youth for ' woods , gardens , rookeries , fish- ponds , arbours ' had to be satisfied with the fulfilment of its more modest items . Yet he contrived , according to the enumeration of one of his biographers1 , to introduce into his five ...
... youth for ' woods , gardens , rookeries , fish- ponds , arbours ' had to be satisfied with the fulfilment of its more modest items . Yet he contrived , according to the enumeration of one of his biographers1 , to introduce into his five ...
Стр. xlvi
... youth , to the Carylls and Cromwells and Blounts , and to the friends of his manhood , to Swift and Arbuthnot and Gay , and to Boling- broke , whom he thought ' superior to anything he had seen in human nature . ' Nor was he a friend in ...
... youth , to the Carylls and Cromwells and Blounts , and to the friends of his manhood , to Swift and Arbuthnot and Gay , and to Boling- broke , whom he thought ' superior to anything he had seen in human nature . ' Nor was he a friend in ...
Стр. xlviii
... youth was not the result of another Renais- sance , of another movement towards intellectual freedom through genuine culture . English society and its handmaid , English literature , had in the days of the Restora- tion , recklessly ...
... youth was not the result of another Renais- sance , of another movement towards intellectual freedom through genuine culture . English society and its handmaid , English literature , had in the days of the Restora- tion , recklessly ...
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Addison Æneid Alluding ancient Bavius blest Boileau Bolingbroke Carruthers character charms Cibber Colley Cibber Court Critics Dæmons death died divine Dryden Duke Dulness Dunciad edition Epistle Essay on Criticism ev'n ev'ry eyes fair fame famous fate flames flow'rs fool genius Goddess grace happy heart heav'n hero Homer honour Horace Iliad imitation King Lady learned letters literary live Lord Lord Hervey mind Moral Essays Muse Nature never night nymph o'er once Ovid Passion Pastorals pleas'd poem poet Poet's poetic poetry Pope Pope's pow'r praise pride published Queen rage reign rise sacred Sappho satire sense shade shine sing skies soul Swift Sylphs taste thee things thou thought thro translation trembling Twas Twickenham verse Virg Virgil Virtue Warburton Warton Whig wife write youth