Discoveries, 1641: Conversations with William Drummond of Hawthornden, 1619Barnes & Noble, 1966 - 134 Seiten |
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Seite 70
... Virgil . Quinti- lian . much corrupt , as the others drinesse , and squallor , if Spencer . they choose not carefully . Spencer , in affecting the Ancients writ no Language : Yet I would have ( 116 ) him read for his matter ; but as Virgil ...
... Virgil . Quinti- lian . much corrupt , as the others drinesse , and squallor , if Spencer . they choose not carefully . Spencer , in affecting the Ancients writ no Language : Yet I would have ( 116 ) him read for his matter ; but as Virgil ...
Seite 77
... Virgil : —Credas innate reuul- Virgil . sas Cycladas . Hee doth not say it was so , but seem'd to be so . Although it be somewhat incredible , that is excus'd before it be spoken . But there are Hyperboles , which will become one ...
... Virgil : —Credas innate reuul- Virgil . sas Cycladas . Hee doth not say it was so , but seem'd to be so . Although it be somewhat incredible , that is excus'd before it be spoken . But there are Hyperboles , which will become one ...
Seite 104
... Virgil saw . For though the Argument of an Epick - Poeme be farre more diffus'd , & powr'd out , then that of Tragedy ; yet Virgil writing of Aeneas hath preter- mitted many things . He neither tells how he was borne , how brought up ...
... Virgil saw . For though the Argument of an Epick - Poeme be farre more diffus'd , & powr'd out , then that of Tragedy ; yet Virgil writing of Aeneas hath preter- mitted many things . He neither tells how he was borne , how brought up ...
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Action affections Alcestis alwayes answer Aristotle BEN JONSON better busines Cæsar call'd CEZAED CHIGAN Cicero Comedy counsell creatures delight discourse doth Eloquence Epick Epigrame erre Euripides excellent Fable faine farre Father favour fitnesse foole foolish grace greatnesse grow heare hearers hee hath heth himselfe Homer honest honour Horace imitated invent Iohn judgement King labour Lady Language laughter Learning lesse Lord Lysippus Master meere MICHIGAN mind nature never offended perfect person pides Plato Plautus Poeme Poesie Poet Poetry praise preter Prince profit publike quæ quàm Queen Quintilian saith scorne Sejanus selfe sense shee shew Silent Woman Sophocles speake style Tacitus Theseus things thinke thought tion tium translated Truth tyme UNIV verses vertue vices Virgil vitious wher whole Wiat wise words write wrott wyfe yett