The Poems of John Dryden: 1686-1693Longman, 1995 - 492 páginas John Dryden was the greatest writer of Restoration England. These volumes are the third and fourth volumes in a five-volume edition of Dryden's poems and result from a complete reappraisal of the canon, text and context of his work. The modernised text has been prepared from a fresh examination of the early printed editions and takes account of the large number of manuscript copies which survived. These volumes cover the poems which Dryden published between 1686-1696. This was a decade which saw the completion of his work of Catholic apologetics, The Hindand the Panther, the major translations from Juvenal and Persius, and his return to the stage after the Revolution of 1688-9 deprived him of the laureateship. Throughout these two new volumes Dryden's language is glossed in unprecedented detail, revealing the poetic precision of his vocabulary. Together with volumes one and two they offer the most informative and accessible edition of Dryden's poetry and provide an invaluable resource for students of Restoratation culture. |
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... body and blood of Christ ; Protestants held that they were instead symbols of Christ's body and blood . Abraham Woodhead , from a Catholic standpoint , summarizes the four principal current views as to the real presence of Christ's body ...
... body glorified , 95 Impassible , and penetrating parts ? ΙΟΟ IOS Let them declare by what mysterious arts He shot that body through th ' opposing might Of bolts and bars impervious to the light , And stood before his train confessed in ...
... body ' . The medieval church agreed that the consecration of the bread and wine effected a change in their ' substance ' into the body and blood of Christ , whereas their ' accidents ' ( outward appearance ) remained un- changed : this ...
Contenido
To the Memory of Anne Killigrew | 3 |
To Sir George Etherege | 19 |
To Mr Henry Higden | 27 |
Derechos de autor | |
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