The Critical Works of John Dennis, 2. köideJohns Hopkins Press, 1964 |
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Page 109
... give my Reasons for dissenting from you , with regard to these Two Points ; the first of which is of Consequence , and the Second of the utmost Importance : I desire that you would give me leave to enumerate some Things , in which we ...
... give my Reasons for dissenting from you , with regard to these Two Points ; the first of which is of Consequence , and the Second of the utmost Importance : I desire that you would give me leave to enumerate some Things , in which we ...
Page 163
... give me leave to set before you the two last Lines : And Fame to late Posterity shall tell , No Lovers liv'd so great , or dy'd so well . And this Encomium of the Conduct and the Death of Anthony and Cleopatra , a Conduct so immoral ...
... give me leave to set before you the two last Lines : And Fame to late Posterity shall tell , No Lovers liv'd so great , or dy'd so well . And this Encomium of the Conduct and the Death of Anthony and Cleopatra , a Conduct so immoral ...
Page 295
... give that sanction to the Rules which the Beautifull original could not give ? Did my Lord Roscommons Translation give the Rules that Authority which They had Two Thousand years agoe in Greece ? or which They had at Rome in The Time of ...
... give that sanction to the Rules which the Beautifull original could not give ? Did my Lord Roscommons Translation give the Rules that Authority which They had Two Thousand years agoe in Greece ? or which They had at Rome in The Time of ...
Contents
Introduction | vii |
An Essay on the Genius and Writings of Shakespear 1712 | 1 |
To the Spectator on Poetical Justice 1712 | 18 |
Copyright | |
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acquainted Action Addison admirable Ancients appear Aristotle Author Beauties Ben Johnson Boileau Cæsar Cato Character Cibber Comedy Comick Congreve Conscious Lovers Coriolanus critic Dacier Dennis's Dramatick Dryden Dunciad edition English Epick Essay Fable Faults Fools Friend Genius Gentleman Gildon give Homer Honour Horace Hudibras ibid Iliad Imitation John Dennis Juba Judgment King Liberty Lord Lord Roscommon Love manner Milton Moral Nature never noble Numbers oblig'd observe Opinion Original Letters Paradise Lost Passage Passion Persons Play pleas'd Poem Poet poetic justice Poetry Pope Pope's Portius Preface pretend probably Prose publick publish'd published Rape Reader Reason Remarks ridiculous Roman rules Satire says Scene Sempronius Sense Shakespear shew shewn Sir John Edgar Soul Spectator Spirit Stage Steele sublime Syphax taste Tatler Temple of Fame Theatre thee thing thou thought thro tion Tragedy Translation true Verse Virgil Virtue Walter Moyle World writ write wrote Wycherley