William Shakespeare: The Critical Heritage Volume 4 1753-1765Brian Vickers Routledge, 1. 9. 2003 - Počet stran: 568 The Critical Heritage gathers together a large body of critical sources on major figures in literature. Each volume presents contemporary responses to a writer's work, enabling student and researcher to read the material. |
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Strana 2
... poets and essayists. Absolutely typical is this stanza by Gray from The Progress of Poesy. A Pindarick Ode (1754), lines 83 ... poet of nature, was celebrated for his power to move the passions across the whole range of experience, but ...
... poets and essayists. Absolutely typical is this stanza by Gray from The Progress of Poesy. A Pindarick Ode (1754), lines 83 ... poet of nature, was celebrated for his power to move the passions across the whole range of experience, but ...
Strana 4
... poet has shar'd, Insipid is ART when with NATURE compar'd. The dominant reaction is to admit his faults but to more than excuse them. So George Colman imagines Shakespeare offering all his faults (puns, bombast, incorrectness) to the ...
... poet has shar'd, Insipid is ART when with NATURE compar'd. The dominant reaction is to admit his faults but to more than excuse them. So George Colman imagines Shakespeare offering all his faults (puns, bombast, incorrectness) to the ...
Strana 12
... poet are confined to historical truth. They are at liberty to select any part or parts of history, and to unite events which really happened at distant periods of time, provided they be so united as to preserve probability: I mean, as ...
... poet are confined to historical truth. They are at liberty to select any part or parts of history, and to unite events which really happened at distant periods of time, provided they be so united as to preserve probability: I mean, as ...
Strana 25
... Poet Laureate William Whitehead's 'Verses dropt in Mr. Garrick's Temple of Shakespeare at Hampton', in which, while Garrick is one day offering thanks to the statue of Shakespeare, it suddenly speaks. The 'marble God' points to 'his ...
... Poet Laureate William Whitehead's 'Verses dropt in Mr. Garrick's Temple of Shakespeare at Hampton', in which, while Garrick is one day offering thanks to the statue of Shakespeare, it suddenly speaks. The 'marble God' points to 'his ...
Strana 32
... poets and orators which owe their sublimity to a richness and profusion of images, in which the mind is so dazzled as to ... poet's genius' to 'the timid regularity' of his editors, who correct what they take to be faults (No. 203). 32 ...
... poets and orators which owe their sublimity to a richness and profusion of images, in which the mind is so dazzled as to ... poet's genius' to 'the timid regularity' of his editors, who correct what they take to be faults (No. 203). 32 ...
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