Proceedings of the Modern Language Association Neoclassicism Conferences, 1967-1968AMS Press, 1970 - 157 páginas |
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Página 58
... Horace's epistle are aesthetic in nature . Horace separates political from poetic concerns , so that the foolish artistic judgments contrast ( from his point of view ) with the intelli- gent political ones . In fact much of the ...
... Horace's epistle are aesthetic in nature . Horace separates political from poetic concerns , so that the foolish artistic judgments contrast ( from his point of view ) with the intelli- gent political ones . In fact much of the ...
Página 59
... Horace " and , as one might expect from the rejection of Horace in the first Dialogue of the Epilogue to the Satires ( 1738 ) written shortly thereafter , as superior in an important way . Pope was always aware that , unlike Boileau and ...
... Horace " and , as one might expect from the rejection of Horace in the first Dialogue of the Epilogue to the Satires ( 1738 ) written shortly thereafter , as superior in an important way . Pope was always aware that , unlike Boileau and ...
Página 60
... Horace is unjustifiably praising a tyrant who , it was commonly thought , under the guise of stability and order . was one of the destroyers of Republican atandards and freedom . Pope's friend Lyttleton , for example , describes the ...
... Horace is unjustifiably praising a tyrant who , it was commonly thought , under the guise of stability and order . was one of the destroyers of Republican atandards and freedom . Pope's friend Lyttleton , for example , describes the ...
Contenido
Introduction by Paul J Korshin University | 3 |
The Scheduled Quest by Carey McIntosh | 27 |
The Role of the Original | 53 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Aesthetics Angeles Aspects Association attack Augustan Augustus authors Book Cambridge character Chicago Clarendon Press Classical clear comedy concept Criticism Development disorder Donald Dryden Duke University Early Edward Eighteenth Century England English Literature English Poetry English Studies Epistle Essays example genres George Gray Gray's Harvard Haven Henry History hope Horace human idea Imagination Imitation important James John Johnson judgment kind Language later Library limited lines Literary London Mass meaning Michigan mind Modern Language Association nature Neo-Classical Notes object original Oxford Oxford University Press particularity Paul period Philosophical PMLA poem poet Poetic Poetry political Pope Pope's present Princeton Prose question Reason relation Restoration Review Richard Robert Roman Samuel satire satirist says Science seems Seventeenth Century Studies Style sublime suggest Taste Theory things Thomas Thought Tradition Translation Univ University Press values verse voice Writing York