John Dryden; a Critical BiographyRussell & Russell, 1969 - 240 páginas |
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Página 105
... satire since , as Dryden realised , a satirist could make or more usually break a man's character and reputation for ever . In Dryden himself , the satiric impulse was the obverse of the fawner and flatterer of the dedications . It was ...
... satire since , as Dryden realised , a satirist could make or more usually break a man's character and reputation for ever . In Dryden himself , the satiric impulse was the obverse of the fawner and flatterer of the dedications . It was ...
Página 106
... satire no matter from what deep sources it sprang was , however , not sufficient . Others had written satire in English , but not , Dryden considered , well ; their art had not been as developed as their desire to satirise was strong ...
... satire no matter from what deep sources it sprang was , however , not sufficient . Others had written satire in English , but not , Dryden considered , well ; their art had not been as developed as their desire to satirise was strong ...
Página 176
... satire " . Dryden was always ready to admit his changes of taste ; in this case , the change may have been due to the fact that he himself was a great satirist frustrated by circumstances from writing the satire on the new age that he ...
... satire " . Dryden was always ready to admit his changes of taste ; in this case , the change may have been due to the fact that he himself was a great satirist frustrated by circumstances from writing the satire on the new age that he ...
Contenido
An Education in Doubt | 1 |
The Making of an Augustan | 10 |
Four | 38 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Términos y frases comunes
Absalom and Achitophel Aeneid Albion and Albanius already Annus Mirabilis Aureng-Zebe character Charles comedy Congreve Cotterstock couplet Court Cowley critics Cromwell Davenant death dedication delight Dorset Dryden wrote Duke of York Earl English epic eyes fact fame famous father felt friends genius Gerrard Street Gilbert Pickering heroic play Hobbes honour Howard ideas John Dryden King King's knew Lady Elizabeth later letter lines live London Lord Lord Chamberlain Love Lucretius MacFlecknoe Majesty matter Milton mind nature never night Osborn Parliament Pepys perhaps poem Poet Laureate poetic poetry political praise preface prologue Religio Laici religion rhyme Rochester Royal Rymer satire says Scott-Saintsbury seemed Shadwell Shaftesbury Shakespeare Sir Robert soul stage success talk tells theatre things thought Titchmarsh Tonson tragedy translation turned verse Virgil Waller Whig Will's words write written XVIII young