The Sentence-structure in John Dryden's An Essay of Dramatic PoesyKeisuisha, 1985 - 215 pages |
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Page 110
... advantage to express and 15 work up the passions , I wish any example he could bring from them would make it good ; for I confess their verses are to me the coldest I have ever read . Neither , indeed , is it possible for them , in the ...
... advantage to express and 15 work up the passions , I wish any example he could bring from them would make it good ; for I confess their verses are to me the coldest I have ever read . Neither , indeed , is it possible for them , in the ...
Page 128
... advantage of Shakespeare's wit , which was their precedent , great natural gifts , improved by study : Beaumont especially being so accurate a 30 judge of plays , that Ben Johnson , while he lived , sub- mitted all his writings to his ...
... advantage of Shakespeare's wit , which was their precedent , great natural gifts , improved by study : Beaumont especially being so accurate a 30 judge of plays , that Ben Johnson , while he lived , sub- mitted all his writings to his ...
Page 162
... advantages I lately named , as breaks in a 2 hemistich , or running the sense into another line , thereby making art ... advantage of the Ancients to be despised , of changing the kind of verse when they please , with the change of 30 ...
... advantages I lately named , as breaks in a 2 hemistich , or running the sense into another line , thereby making art ... advantage of the Ancients to be despised , of changing the kind of verse when they please , with the change of 30 ...
Contents
Diagrammatic Representation of the SentenceStructure | 23 |
Computer Analysis | 186 |
Conclusion | 197 |
Copyright | |
1 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
୯୨ acknowledge action actors admiration Ancients appear appended argument Aristotle audience base minor sentences beauty Ben Johnson betwixt blank verse Catiline characters commended compass concernment constituent Corneille Corneille's Crites debaters discourse Dramatic Poesy DRYDEN'S AN ESSAY Dryden's prose embedded English Essay of Dramatic Eugenius F2 F F3 F fancy farther Fd2 F Fd3 F Fd3 Fd3 Fd4 F Fd6 Fd7 Fletcher following connectors honour Horace humour imagine John Dryden's Johnson judge judgment Julius Cæsar language Lat2 Lat3 Lat4 Lat5 Lat6 Lat7 Lat8 latter Lisideius major sentence consist Michio modern Molière narrator G Neander never observed Okayama University passions perfection persons plot poem poet reason represented rhyme scene Sejanus Seneca SENTENCE-STRUCTURE IN JOHN serious plays Shakespeare Silent Woman speak stage structural linguistic things thoughts thrice tragedies Unity unnatural words writ write