Lectures on the English Comic Writers with Miscellaneous EssaysJ. M. Dent & sons, Limited, 1963 - Počet stran: 346 |
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Strana 50
... light , but obscurity - served not to strengthen , but to confound . Their mystical verses read like riddles or an allegory . They neither belong to the class of lively or severe poetry . They have not the force of the one , nor the ...
... light , but obscurity - served not to strengthen , but to confound . Their mystical verses read like riddles or an allegory . They neither belong to the class of lively or severe poetry . They have not the force of the one , nor the ...
Strana 58
... Light , which forms a perfect contrast to Milton's Invocation to Light , in the commencement of the third book of Paradise Lost , begins in the following manner : — ' First - born of Chaos , who so fair didst come From the old negro's ...
... Light , which forms a perfect contrast to Milton's Invocation to Light , in the commencement of the third book of Paradise Lost , begins in the following manner : — ' First - born of Chaos , who so fair didst come From the old negro's ...
Strana 100
... light thrown on human life from an assumed character , nor any direct one from a display of the author's own . The Tatler and Spectator are , as it were , made up of notes and memorandums of the events and incidents of the day , with ...
... light thrown on human life from an assumed character , nor any direct one from a display of the author's own . The Tatler and Spectator are , as it were , made up of notes and memorandums of the events and incidents of the day , with ...
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A. C. Cawley absurdity admiration affectation amusing appearance beauty Beggar's Opera Ben Jonson better Brentford character circumstances comedy comic common criticism delight Don Quixote Edited English equally ESSAYS Everyman's Library extravagance eyes face fancy favourite feeling folly genius gentleman Gerald Bullett Gil Blas give grace Hazlitt heart hero Hogarth Hudibras human humour idea imagination insipid instance interest J. G. Lockhart lady laugh live look Lord Lord Byron lover ludicrous manners means Millamant mind moral nature never novel object ourselves pain passion person play pleasure POEMS poet poetry present pretensions principle Rake's Progress reason refinement ridiculous romance satire scene School for Scandal seems self-love sense sentiment Shakspeare shew sort spirit stage story style supposed sympathy Tartuffe Tatler thing thought Tom Jones Translated truth turn vanity vols whole words writers