The Spectator, 4권Tonson, 1738 |
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2 페이지
... Author , by Mr. Tickell . N. B. Thefe Three Volumes , with the Tatlers , Spec- tators , Guardians , Freeholder , and Remarks on feveral Parts of Italy , complete Mr. Addifon's Works in Twelves . HARVARD UNIVERSITY LIBRARY JUN 261968 TO ...
... Author , by Mr. Tickell . N. B. Thefe Three Volumes , with the Tatlers , Spec- tators , Guardians , Freeholder , and Remarks on feveral Parts of Italy , complete Mr. Addifon's Works in Twelves . HARVARD UNIVERSITY LIBRARY JUN 261968 TO ...
7 페이지
... Author and Disposer of all Things may place You in that higher Mansion of Bliss and Im- mortality which is prepared for good Princes , Lawgivers , and He- A 4 roes , roes , when HE in HIS due Time removes them The Dedication .
... Author and Disposer of all Things may place You in that higher Mansion of Bliss and Im- mortality which is prepared for good Princes , Lawgivers , and He- A 4 roes , roes , when HE in HIS due Time removes them The Dedication .
13 페이지
... Brothers , Sons , and Kindred flain . I am forry to find that an Author , who is very juftly eflecmed among the keft Judges , has admitted fome Strokes Strokes of this Nature into a very fine Poem , N ° 253 . 13 The SPECTATOR .
... Brothers , Sons , and Kindred flain . I am forry to find that an Author , who is very juftly eflecmed among the keft Judges , has admitted fome Strokes Strokes of this Nature into a very fine Poem , N ° 253 . 13 The SPECTATOR .
14 페이지
... Author . They are fome of them un- common , but fuch as the Reader muft affent to , when he fees them explained with that Elegance and Perfpicuity in which they are delivered . As for those which are the most known , and the moft ...
... Author . They are fome of them un- common , but fuch as the Reader muft affent to , when he fees them explained with that Elegance and Perfpicuity in which they are delivered . As for those which are the most known , and the moft ...
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I cannot but take Notice , that our English Author has after the fame manner exemplified feveral of his Precepts in the very Precepts themselves . I fhall produce two or three Inftances of this Kind . Speaking of the infipid Smoothness ...
I cannot but take Notice , that our English Author has after the fame manner exemplified feveral of his Precepts in the very Precepts themselves . I fhall produce two or three Inftances of this Kind . Speaking of the infipid Smoothness ...
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Action admired Æneid againſt agreeable alfo Anſwer Beauty becauſe befides Behaviour Cafe Character Circumftances confider Confideration Converfation Criticks defcribed Defcription Defign Defire Difcourfe difcovered Drefs Enville Fable faid fame feems feen felf felves feveral fhall fhew fhort fhould fince firft firſt fome fomething fometimes foon Fortune fpeak Friend ftill fuch fufficient give greateſt Happineſs himſelf Homer Honour Houfe Houſe humble Servant ibid Iliad juft kind Lady laft laſt lefs likewife Loft look Love Mafter Mankind manner Marriage Meaſure Milton Mind Miſtreſs moft moſt muft muſt Nature neceffary Number obferved Occafion Paffage paffed Paffion Paradife particular Perfon Place pleafing pleaſe Pleaſure Poem Poet poffible prefent publick racter raiſe Reader Reaſon Reflexion reprefented ſelf Senfe ſeveral ſhall ſhe ſpeak SPECTATOR thefe themſelves theſe thing thofe thoſe Thoughts tion underſtand uſe Virgil Virtue whofe Woman World young
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67 페이지 - Roman empire, has described the birth of its great rival, the Carthaginian commonwealth : Milton, with the like art in his poem on the fall of man, has related the fall of those angels who are his professed enemies.
70 페이지 - Besides, it was easier for Homer and Virgil to dash the truth with fiction, as they were in no danger of offending the religion of their country by it. But as for Milton, he had not only a very few circumstances upon which to raise his poem, but was also obliged to proceed with the greatest caution in every thing that he added out of his own invention.
134 페이지 - The great masters in composition know very well that many an elegant phrase becomes improper for a poet or an orator, when it has been debased by common use. For this reason the works of ancient authors, which are written in dead languages, have a great advantage over those which are written in languages that are now spoken. Were there any mean phrases or idioms in Virgil...
205 페이지 - Being, he frequently confesses his omnipotence, that being the perfection he was forced to allow him, and the only consideration which could support his pride under the shame of his defeat. Nor...
110 페이지 - ... other particulars as may not properly fall under any of them. This I thought fit to...
235 페이지 - Death produces those monsters and hell-hounds which from time to time enter into their mother, and tear the bowels of her who gave them birth. These are the terrors of an evil conscience, and the proper fruits of Sin, which naturally rise from the apprehensions of Death.
137 페이지 - Y, when it precedes a vowel. This, and some other innovations in the measure of his verse, has varied his numbers in such a manner, as makes them incapable of satiating the ear, and cloying the reader, which the same uniform measure would certainly have done, and which the perpetual returns of rhyme never fail to do in long narrative poems.
88 페이지 - There is in these several characters of Homer, a certain dignity as well as novelty, which adapts them in a more peculiar manner to the nature of an heroic poem. Though at the same time, to give them the greater variety, he has described a Vulcan, that is a buffoon among his gods, and a Thersites among his mortals.
112 페이지 - I shall show more at large in another paper ; though considering how all the poets of the age in which he writ were infected with this wrong way of thinking, he is rather to be admired that he did not give more into it, than that he did sometimes comply with the vicious taste which still prevails so much among modern writers.
151 페이지 - A battle or a triumph are conjunctures in which not one man in a million is likely to be engaged; but when we see a person at the point of death, we cannot forbear being attentive to every thing he...