| Thomas Warton - 1762 - 264 páginas
...diffufed, and we require the fame order and defign which every modern performance is expected to have, in poems where they never were regarded or intended....warm imagination and a ftrong fenfibility. It was his bufmefs to engage the fancy, and to intereft the attention by bold and ftriking images f, in the formation,... | |
| Edmund Spenser - 1805 - 448 páginas
...diff'ufed, and we require the fame order and defign which every modern performance is expefted to have, in poems where they never were regarded or intended....the carelefs exuberance of a warm imagination and a firong feniibility. It was his bufinefs to engage the fancy, and to intereft the attention by bold... | |
| Edmund Spenser - 1805 - 452 páginas
...diffufed, and we require the fame order and defign which every modern performance is expefted to have, in poems where they never were regarded or intended. Spenfer, (and the fame may be laid of Ariofto,) did not live in an age of planning. His poetry is the carelefs exuberance of a warm... | |
| Thomas Warton - 1807 - 384 páginas
...in poems where they never were regarded or intended. Spenser, and the same may be said of Ariosto, did not live in an age of planning. His poetry is the care* Or). Fur. c. \. s. 1. less exuberance of a warm imagination and a strong sensibility^ It was... | |
| Edmund Spenser, Caroline Matilda Kirkland - 1847 - 262 páginas
...within its own bounds, so that the appearance of Arthur in all is gratuitous. " Spenser," says Warton, " did not live in an age of planning. His poetry is the careless exuberance of a warm imagination and a strong sensibility. It was his business to engage the... | |
| Geoffrey Chaucer, Charles Dunham Deshler - 1847 - 736 páginas
...within its own bounds, so that the appearance of Arthur in all is gratuitous. " Spenser," says Warton, " did not live in an age of planning. His poetry is the careless exuberance of a warm imagination and a strong sensibility. It was his business to engage the... | |
| Raymond Macdonald Alden - 1911 - 754 páginas
...in poems where they never were regarded or intended. Spenser, and the same may be said of Ariosto, did not live in an age of planning. His poetry is the careless exuberance of a warm imagination and a strong sensibility. It was his business to engage the... | |
| Raymond Macdonald Alden - 1911 - 752 páginas
...in poems where they never were regarded or intended. Spenser, and the same may be said of Ariosto, did not live in an age of planning. His poetry is the careless exuberance of a warm imagination and a strong sensibility. It was his business to engage the... | |
| Raymond Macdonald Alden - 1911 - 744 páginas
...in poems where they never were regarded or intended. Spenser, and the same may be said of Ariosto, did not live in an age of planning. His poetry is the careless exuberance of a warm imagination and a strong sensibility. It was his business to engage the... | |
| Richard Pape Cowl - 1914 - 346 páginas
...in poems where they never were regarded or intended. Spenser, and the same may be said of Ariosto, did not live in an age of planning. His poetry is the careless exuberance of a warm imagination and a strong sensibility. Absurd to judge Ariosto or Spenser... | |
| |