Lives of Dryden and PopeClarendon Press, 1885 - 326 Seiten |
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Seite xviii
... honour , which , being very little accustomed to favours from the great , I know not well how to receive , or in what terms to acknowledge . ' When , upon some slight encouragement , I first visited your lordship , I was overpowered ...
... honour , which , being very little accustomed to favours from the great , I know not well how to receive , or in what terms to acknowledge . ' When , upon some slight encouragement , I first visited your lordship , I was overpowered ...
Seite xxxi
... honour be it added that Johnson's humour is never coarse . Ferocious and unscrupulous as Johnson might be in conversation- intellectually the moral nature is ever pure within , and his mirth is as innocent as a child's . No other hand ...
... honour be it added that Johnson's humour is never coarse . Ferocious and unscrupulous as Johnson might be in conversation- intellectually the moral nature is ever pure within , and his mirth is as innocent as a child's . No other hand ...
Seite 31
... heard , was the real practice of the poet . There were other strokes in the ' Rehearsal ' by which malice was gratified ; the debate between Love and Honour , which keeps Prince Volscius in a single boot , is DRYDEN . 31.
... heard , was the real practice of the poet . There were other strokes in the ' Rehearsal ' by which malice was gratified ; the debate between Love and Honour , which keeps Prince Volscius in a single boot , is DRYDEN . 31.
Seite 37
... honour , will not be thought to love truth only for herself . Yet it may easily happen that information may come at a commodious time , 10 and as truth and interest are not by any fatal necessity at variance , that one may by accident ...
... honour , will not be thought to love truth only for herself . Yet it may easily happen that information may come at a commodious time , 10 and as truth and interest are not by any fatal necessity at variance , that one may by accident ...
Seite 39
... honour that any man can receive from him , which is to be railed at by him . If I had ill - nature enough to prompt me to wish a very bad wish for him , it should be , that he would go on and finish his translation . By that it will ...
... honour that any man can receive from him , which is to be railed at by him . If I had ill - nature enough to prompt me to wish a very bad wish for him , it should be , that he would go on and finish his translation . By that it will ...
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Absalom and Achitophel Addison afterwards Albion and Albanius appeared Bayes beauties Bolingbroke bookseller called censure character Charles Charles Dryden Cibber Cowley death Dennis dramatic Dryden Duke Duke of Guise Dunciad Earl edition elegance English Epistle epitaph Essay on Criticism excellence express fame father faults favour genius Gondibert Greek Homer honour Hudibras Iliad imitation John Dryden Johnson kind King knew known labour language learning letter lines living Lord Lord Halifax meaning mind nature never numbers o'er opinion original Ovid passage passions perhaps play pleased poem poet poetical poetry Pope Pope's praise preface printed prose published Rasselas reader reason remarks rhyme ridiculous satire says seems sense sentence Shakspeare shew Sir Robert Howard sometimes supposed Swift thought tion told tragedy translation verse Virgil virtue Warburton words writing written wrote ΙΟ