The Works of John Dryden: Now First Collected ...W. Miller, 1808 |
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... Answer to the Duchess's Paper by the Rev. Edward Stillingfleet , 194 A Defence of the Paper written by the Duchess of York , against the Answer made to it , • An Answer to the Defence of the Third Paper , · 208 252 PAGE , The Art of ...
... Answer to the Duchess's Paper by the Rev. Edward Stillingfleet , 194 A Defence of the Paper written by the Duchess of York , against the Answer made to it , • An Answer to the Defence of the Third Paper , · 208 252 PAGE , The Art of ...
Page 5
... answer this objection , -why men are not daily formed after the same manner ; which he tells us , is , because the kindly warmth and procreative fa- culty of the ground is now worn out ; the sun is a disabled lover ; and the earth is ...
... answer this objection , -why men are not daily formed after the same manner ; which he tells us , is , because the kindly warmth and procreative fa- culty of the ground is now worn out ; the sun is a disabled lover ; and the earth is ...
Page 42
... - ler , he exercised such inhuman cruelty on the body of his fellow - creature . How is this , Mr Varlet , ( answered Plutarch , ) by what signs and tokens can you prove I am in passion ? Is it by 42 THE LIFE OF PLUTARCH .
... - ler , he exercised such inhuman cruelty on the body of his fellow - creature . How is this , Mr Varlet , ( answered Plutarch , ) by what signs and tokens can you prove I am in passion ? Is it by 42 THE LIFE OF PLUTARCH .
Page 53
... answer was not a little pleasing to Scipio , because by it he found himself not disesteemed , nor put into comparison with the rest ; but by the delicacy and gallantry of a well - turned compliment , set like a man divine above them all ...
... answer was not a little pleasing to Scipio , because by it he found himself not disesteemed , nor put into comparison with the rest ; but by the delicacy and gallantry of a well - turned compliment , set like a man divine above them all ...
Page 68
... answered all that could reasona- bly be objected against our author's judgment ; but casually casting my eye on the works of a French gentleman , deservedly famous for wit and criti- cism , I wondered , amongst many commendations of ...
... answered all that could reasona- bly be objected against our author's judgment ; but casually casting my eye on the works of a French gentleman , deservedly famous for wit and criti- cism , I wondered , amongst many commendations of ...
Common terms and phrases
admirable afterwards amongst ancient answer Apelles appear atque beautiful believe betwixt bishop bishop of Winchester bishop of Worcester body called Cardinal of Bourbon Catholic cause church of England church of Rome Cicero colours commanded confess Correggio defence desire discourse divine draperies Dryden Duchess Duke of Guise endeavour excellent eyes farther favour figures genius give grace greatest hand Holy honour Huguenots imitate judgment king King of Navarre king's League learned least lights and shadows living majesty manner matter means mind nature never noble observed opinion painter painting particular passions Paul Veronese perfect person Philostratus picture pleasing Plutarch poet poetry Pope precept pretended prince principal quæ reader reason Reformation relation religion Roman rules saith scripture shew sight sort soul speak ther things thought tion Titian Trajan translation true truth ture virtue wherein whole wholly words XVII
Popular passages
Page 82 - And it came to pass at the seventh time, that he said, Behold, there ariseth a little cloud out of the sea, like a man's hand.
Page 302 - I cannot do it without digression from my subject ; though it seems too strict at the first appearance, because it excludes all secret intrigues, which are the beauties of the modern stage ; for nothing can be carried on with privacy, when the Chorus is supposed to be always present. — But to proceed : I must say this to the advantage of painting, even above tragedy, that what this last represents in the space of many hours, the former shews us in one moment.
Page 207 - What will it profit a man to gain the whole world and lose his own soul ?' Remember how often Paul appeals to his holy, just, unblameable life.
Page 295 - ... are never to be made perfect, but always to be drawn with some specks of frailty and deficience ; such as they have been described to us in history, if they were real characters, or such as the poet began to shew them at their first appearance, if they were only fictitious or imaginary. The perfection of such stage-characters consists chiefly in their likeness to the deficient faulty nature, which is their original...
Page 282 - Current through ages, she would stamp for thine! Let friendship, as she caus'd, excuse the deed; With thee, and such as thee, she must succeed. But what, if fashion tempted Pope astray ? The witch has spells, and Jervas knew a day When mode-struck Belles and Beaux were proud to come And buy of him a thousand years of bloom.* Ev'n then I deem it but a venal crime : Perish alone that selfish sordid rhyme, Which flatters lawless sway, or tinsel pride ; Let black Oblivion plunge it in her tide.
Page 311 - ... cattle," says the Poet : or at best, the keepers of cattle for other men : they have nothing which is properly their own ; that is a sufficient mortification for me, while I am translating Virgil. But to copy the best author is a kind of praise if I perform it as I ought ; as a copy after Raphael is more to be commended than an original of any indifferent Painter. Under this head of invention is placed the disposition of the work, to put all things in a beautiful order and harmony, that the whole...
Page 290 - Beautiful Form. Neither is there any man of the present age equal in the strength, proportion, and knitting of his limbs, to the Hercules of Farnese, made by Glycon; or any woman who can justly be compared with the Medicean Venus of Cleomenes. And upon this account the noblest Poets and the best Orators, when they...
Page 305 - After all, it is a good thing to laugh at any rate ; and if a straw can tickle a man, it is an instrument of happiness. Beasts can weep when they suffer, but they cannot laugh: and, as Sir William Davenant observes, in his Preface to Gondibert, " It is the wisdom of a government to permit plays, (he might have added farces,) as it is the prudence of a carter to put bells upon his horses to make them carry their burdens cheerfully.
Page 311 - Without invention, a painter is but a copier, and a poet but a plagiary of others. Both are allowed sometimes to copy, and translate ; but, as our author tells you, that is not the best part of their reputation. " Imitators are but a servile kind of cattle...
Page 325 - Strong and glowing colours are the just resemblances of bold metaphors, but both must be judiciously applied; for there is a difference betwixt daring and fool-hardiness. Lucan and Statius often ventured them too far ; our Virgil never. But the great defect of the Pharsalia and the Thebais was in the design; if that had been more perfect, we might have forgiven many of their bold strokes in the colouring, or at least excused them; yet some of them are such as Demosthenes or Cicero could not have...