The Lives of the English PoetsBernhard Tauchnitz, 1858 - 414 páginas |
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Página 15
... attention and alluring curiosity . Tediousness is the most fatal of all faults : negligences or errors are single and local , but tediousness pervades the whole ; other faults are censured and forgotten , but the power of tediousness ...
... attention and alluring curiosity . Tediousness is the most fatal of all faults : negligences or errors are single and local , but tediousness pervades the whole ; other faults are censured and forgotten , but the power of tediousness ...
Página 21
... attention to statutes or reports . His disposition to become an author appeared very early , as he very early felt that force of imagination , and possessed that copiousness of sentiment , by which intellectual pleasure can be given ...
... attention to statutes or reports . His disposition to become an author appeared very early , as he very early felt that force of imagination , and possessed that copiousness of sentiment , by which intellectual pleasure can be given ...
Página 22
... attention , and the wit so exuberant , that it " o'er - in- forms its tenement . " Next year he gave another specimen of his abilities in " The Double Dealer , " which was not received with equal kindness . He writes to his patron , the ...
... attention , and the wit so exuberant , that it " o'er - in- forms its tenement . " Next year he gave another specimen of his abilities in " The Double Dealer , " which was not received with equal kindness . He writes to his patron , the ...
Página 23
... attention ; but , except a very few passages , we are rather amused with noise , and perplexed with stratagem , than entertained with any true delineation of na- tural characters . This , however , was received with more benevolence ...
... attention ; but , except a very few passages , we are rather amused with noise , and perplexed with stratagem , than entertained with any true delineation of na- tural characters . This , however , was received with more benevolence ...
Página 31
... attention to the business of the place ; for , in his poems , the ancient names of nations or places , which he often pro- duces , are pronounced by chance . He afterwards travelled : at Padua he was made doctor of physic ; and , after ...
... attention to the business of the place ; for , in his poems , the ancient names of nations or places , which he often pro- duces , are pronounced by chance . He afterwards travelled : at Padua he was made doctor of physic ; and , after ...
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Términos y frases comunes
acquaintance Addison afterwards appeared blank verse Bolingbroke censure character Cibber contempt conversation criticism death delight deserved diction diligence discovered Dryden Dunciad Earl Edward Young elegance endeavoured English poetry epitaph Essay excellence expected faults favour Fenton fortune friends friendship genius honour Iliad imagination Johnson's Lives kind King known labour Lady learning letter lines Lord Lord Bolingbroke Lord Halifax Lord Landsdowne Lyttelton mankind mentioned mind nature never Night Thoughts numbers observed occasion once opinion Orrery panegyric passion performance perhaps Pindar pleased pleasure poem poet poetical poetry Pope Pope's pounds praise printed published Queen racter reader reason received reputation resentment rhyme satire Savage says seems shew shewn Sir Robert Walpole solicited sometimes soon stanza sufficient supposed Swift Thomson Tickell tion told tragedy translation Tyrconnel verses virtue whigs write written wrote Young