John DrydenHarold Bloom Chelsea House, 1987 - 234 pages A collection of twelve critical essays on the work of Dryden, arranged in chronological order of original publication. |
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Page 85
... restoration in Dryden's political verse will demonstrate this point . Astraea Redux , which proclaims the theme in its title , carries as its epigraph the ... restoration of Charles II with its archetypes of David's The Restoration Myth 85.
... restoration in Dryden's political verse will demonstrate this point . Astraea Redux , which proclaims the theme in its title , carries as its epigraph the ... restoration of Charles II with its archetypes of David's The Restoration Myth 85.
Page 86
... restoration is combined with Aeneas's escape from Troy and founding of Rome in a passage from To My Lord Chancellor ... restoration theme - in fact here Dryden is emphasizing a re- restoration : Henceforth a Series of new time began ...
... restoration is combined with Aeneas's escape from Troy and founding of Rome in a passage from To My Lord Chancellor ... restoration theme - in fact here Dryden is emphasizing a re- restoration : Henceforth a Series of new time began ...
Page 88
... restoration is combined with Aeneas's escape from Troy and founding of Rome in a passage from To My Lord Chancellor ... restoration theme - in fact here Dryden is emphasizing a re- restoration : Henceforth a Series of new time began ...
... restoration is combined with Aeneas's escape from Troy and founding of Rome in a passage from To My Lord Chancellor ... restoration theme - in fact here Dryden is emphasizing a re- restoration : Henceforth a Series of new time began ...
Contents
The Trivialization of Universal Harmony | 7 |
The Herculean Hero in All for Love | 31 |
Absalom and Achitophel | 43 |
Copyright | |
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Absalom and Achitophel action allusion Antony appears argument assertion become begin celebration characters Charles claims Cleopatra close contemporary course court criticism death dialectical Dryden effect English Essay expressed Fables fact figure final Flecknoe follows force formal give hand Hastings hero heroic human idea ideology interest John kind king language later less lines literary live marriage meaning mind Mode nature never notes once opening original passage past perhaps play plot poem poet poetic poetry political praise Preface present Press question reading reason reference relation Religio Religio Laici remains Restoration satire seems sense social sort soul spirit structure success suggests things thou thought tion traditional translation true turn University verse virtue whole writing