Samuel Johnson on LiteratureUngar, 1979 - 102 pàgines |
Des de l'interior del llibre
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Pàgina xiv
... poetry had progressed from the roughness and archaicisms of Edmund Spenser , through the " quibbles , " or puns , and inappropriately " low " words of Shakespeare and through the far- fetched images of the metaphysical poets to the ...
... poetry had progressed from the roughness and archaicisms of Edmund Spenser , through the " quibbles , " or puns , and inappropriately " low " words of Shakespeare and through the far- fetched images of the metaphysical poets to the ...
Pàgina 47
... poets who have written with narrow views and , instead of tracing intellectual pleasure to its natural sources in ... metaphysical poets , of whom , in a criticism on the works of Cowley , it is not improper to give some account.1 The ...
... poets who have written with narrow views and , instead of tracing intellectual pleasure to its natural sources in ... metaphysical poets , of whom , in a criticism on the works of Cowley , it is not improper to give some account.1 The ...
Pàgina 48
... metaphysical poets have seldom risen . Their thoughts are often new but seldom natural ; they are not obvious , but neither are they just ; and the reader , far from wondering that he missed them , wonders more frequently by what ...
... metaphysical poets have seldom risen . Their thoughts are often new but seldom natural ; they are not obvious , but neither are they just ; and the reader , far from wondering that he missed them , wonders more frequently by what ...
Continguts
RASSELAS 1759 | 9 |
LIVES OF THE POETS 17791781 | 47 |
BOSWELLS LIFE OF JOHNSON 1791 | 95 |
Copyright | |
No s’hi han mostrat 1 seccions
Frases i termes més freqüents
action admired Antium appears attention beauties blank verse Boswell's censure characters comedy comic common compositions Comus considered criticism curiosity delight dialogue dignity diligence drama Dryden Dunciad easily elegance endeavored English English poetry epic Essay evil excellence exhibit fable fancy faults fiction genius Homer human ideas Iliad images imagination imitation incidents instruction invention John Wain judgment knowledge labor language learning literary literature Lord Monboddo Lycidas mankind manners metaphysical poets Milton mind mingled modern modes moral nature neoclassicism never novelty observed odes original Paradise Lost passages passions perhaps play pleasing pleasure poem poetical poetry Polonius Pope Pope's praise precepts Preface principles produce Rambler Rasselas reader reason remarked rhyme Samuel Johnson scenes seems sense sentiments Shakespeare sometimes spectator stanza sublime thought tion tragedy translation truth virtue Voltaire vulgar Walter Jackson Bate WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE wonder words writers written