The Enlightenment and English Literature: Prose and Poetry of the Eighteenth Century, with Selected Modern Critical EssaysJohn L. Mahoney D. C. Heath, 1980 - 765 Seiten |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 92
Seite 44
... ancient Genius , o'er its ruins spread , Shakes off the dust , and rears his reverend head . Then Sculpture and her sister - arts revive ; Stones leaped to form , and rocks began to live ; With sweeter notes each rising temple rung ; A ...
... ancient Genius , o'er its ruins spread , Shakes off the dust , and rears his reverend head . Then Sculpture and her sister - arts revive ; Stones leaped to form , and rocks began to live ; With sweeter notes each rising temple rung ; A ...
Seite 130
... ancient learning from the worms , and graves , and dust of manuscripts . Now , the races of these two have been for some ages utterly extinct ; and besides , to discourse any farther of them would not be at all to my purpose . The third ...
... ancient learning from the worms , and graves , and dust of manuscripts . Now , the races of these two have been for some ages utterly extinct ; and besides , to discourse any farther of them would not be at all to my purpose . The third ...
Seite 131
... ancient and illustrious as I have deduced . Now , if I can clearly make out on the contrary , that the most ancient writers have particularly described both the person and the office of a true critic , agree- able to the definition laid ...
... ancient and illustrious as I have deduced . Now , if I can clearly make out on the contrary , that the most ancient writers have particularly described both the person and the office of a true critic , agree- able to the definition laid ...
Inhalt
Mark Akenside | 10 |
Alexander Pope | 15 |
Jonathan Swift | 113 |
Urheberrecht | |
35 weitere Abschnitte werden nicht angezeigt.
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
admiration Aeneid Alexander Pope ancient appear beauty body called cause character charms Colley Cibber colonies considered criticism death delight Dryden Dunciad effect Essay Essay on Criticism eyes fancy genius give Grongar Hill hand happy hath heart Heaven honour hope human ideas Iliad images imagination imitation Imlac Johnson Jonathan Swift Joseph Warton kind king labour learning liberty live look Lord Lucretius mankind manner ment mind modern moral Muse nature never nymph o'er objects observed once opinion pain Paradise Lost passions Pekuah perhaps Pindar pleased pleasure poem poet poetry Pope Pope's praise pride prince principles produce Rasselas reader reason Samuel Johnson satire scene sense sentiments shade Shakespeare soul spirit sublime sure Swift taste thee Theocles things thou thought tion true truth Virgil virtue whole words writing