The Poetry of Conservatism, 1600-1745: A Study of Poets and Public Affairs from Jonson to PopeRivers Press Limited, 1973 - 279 páginas |
Dentro del libro
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Página 42
... reason for this ambivalence is the combination of what he saw as alarming social developments with his own determined adherence to traditional social views , and the peculiar opportunities presented to him by the patronage of great ...
... reason for this ambivalence is the combination of what he saw as alarming social developments with his own determined adherence to traditional social views , and the peculiar opportunities presented to him by the patronage of great ...
Página 96
... reason , is rejected for servility to appetite , ambition , and dis- satisfaction . Milton does not contrast evil motion with good stability , but good and bad motion with each other . There can be no perfect , stable human society ...
... reason , is rejected for servility to appetite , ambition , and dis- satisfaction . Milton does not contrast evil motion with good stability , but good and bad motion with each other . There can be no perfect , stable human society ...
Página 183
... reason and self - love ( Ep . II , 1. 54 ) , are apparently but not actually self - contradictory ; in fact Self - love and reason to one end aspire . ( Ep . II , 1. 87 ) Seeming inconsistencies of character are controlled by one ruling ...
... reason and self - love ( Ep . II , 1. 54 ) , are apparently but not actually self - contradictory ; in fact Self - love and reason to one end aspire . ( Ep . II , 1. 87 ) Seeming inconsistencies of character are controlled by one ruling ...
Contenido
Chapter | 1 |
THE NATURE OF ARISTOCRACY | 21 |
POETS AND REVOLUTION | 73 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 6 secciones no mostradas
Términos y frases comunes
accept achieved acted action ambition appear attacks attempt attitudes balance Bolingbroke century Charles concerned constitution court critical Cromwell death divine Dryden early England English Epistle Essay ethic example existing expressed fact function give harmony heroic human idea ideal Imitations implied important independence individual interest involved James John Jonson kind king land letters liberty limited live London Marvell masque means Milton mind monarchy moral nature opposition Oxford parliament party pattern peace period play poem poet poetic poetry political Pope Pope's position praise present prince problem proper providence reign relation relationship religious Restoration result retirement role royal rule satire seems seen sense social society Swift theory things thought Tory tradition true turn values virtue Whigs whole writing written