The Honest Muse: A Study in Augustan VerseClarendon P., 1967 - 309 Seiten |
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Seite 16
... panegyric was transformed in a way which vividly illustrates the changes that were beginning to affect every branch of poetry . There are few poems of praise for public men after the eighteenth century . The romantics liked to show ...
... panegyric was transformed in a way which vividly illustrates the changes that were beginning to affect every branch of poetry . There are few poems of praise for public men after the eighteenth century . The romantics liked to show ...
Seite 30
... panegyric verse for its own sake , and he had sound poetic reasons for doing so . Johnson recognized these reasons in spite of his dislike of panegyric . He saw that Dryden's habit of mind was admirably ad- justed to compliment - He had ...
... panegyric verse for its own sake , and he had sound poetic reasons for doing so . Johnson recognized these reasons in spite of his dislike of panegyric . He saw that Dryden's habit of mind was admirably ad- justed to compliment - He had ...
Seite 31
... panegyric ' of which the pre- vailing tone was to be enthusiastic praise , not grief . The beautiful faults are often metaphysical in style - Donne especially was in his mind when he wrote - but the movement behind them is entirely his ...
... panegyric ' of which the pre- vailing tone was to be enthusiastic praise , not grief . The beautiful faults are often metaphysical in style - Donne especially was in his mind when he wrote - but the movement behind them is entirely his ...
Inhalt
THE THREE MAIN FORMS | 16 |
DRYDEN | 27 |
THE CONVENTIONS OF SATIRE | 85 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Absalom and Achitophel Addison admiration already ancients argument attack attitude Augustan literature Augustan poetry Bolingbroke character compliment contemporary convention Countess of DORCHESTER death Dryden Dunciad effect eighteenth century elegiac elegy Eloisa to Abelard emotions epic Epilogue epistle Essay on Criticism example experience expression Fame familiar favourite feeling folly friends genius heart hero heroic Honest Muse Horace Horatian Ibid idea ideal imitation John Dryden Johnson kind language learned letters lines literary literature Lives lyric MacFlecknoe mind mode modern mood Moral Essays nature never Oldham Ovid panegyric passage passion pastoral peculiar pleasure poem poet poet's poetic political Pope Pope's praise pride Prologue qualities Quintilian reader realism reflection retirement Rochester satire satirist Satyr seems sense sentiment Shadwell sincerity society style Swift theme tion tone town tradition translation truth verse virtue Whig whole wits witty words writing wrote