With the Wits: Shelburne Essays, Tenth SeriesHoughton Mifflin, 1919 - 311 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 58
Página 7
... perhaps justification for her deep repentance ; cer- tainly in the magnificent sweep of the emotions here portrayed the reader is not likely to feel any- transition from abject self - abasement to a kind of thing false to nature , if ...
... perhaps justification for her deep repentance ; cer- tainly in the magnificent sweep of the emotions here portrayed the reader is not likely to feel any- transition from abject self - abasement to a kind of thing false to nature , if ...
Página 13
... perhaps , no other poet has ever equalled . There is no ill in that ; but he has done an ill thing in bringing this fair passion wantonly , or ignorantly , to a tragic end , and has shown thereby that to this extent 1 Hippolytus , I ...
... perhaps , no other poet has ever equalled . There is no ill in that ; but he has done an ill thing in bringing this fair passion wantonly , or ignorantly , to a tragic end , and has shown thereby that to this extent 1 Hippolytus , I ...
Página 15
... perhaps , no other poet has ever equalled . There is no ill in that ; but he has done an ill thing in bringing this fair passion wantonly , or ignorantly , to a tragic end , and has shown thereby that to this extent 1 Hippolytus , I ...
... perhaps , no other poet has ever equalled . There is no ill in that ; but he has done an ill thing in bringing this fair passion wantonly , or ignorantly , to a tragic end , and has shown thereby that to this extent 1 Hippolytus , I ...
Página 21
... other . But from the standard of the latter , perhaps , rather than of the former , we shall be able to either point of view must be regarded as a de- arrive more directly at the source of what from BEAUMONT AND FLETCHER 21.
... other . But from the standard of the latter , perhaps , rather than of the former , we shall be able to either point of view must be regarded as a de- arrive more directly at the source of what from BEAUMONT AND FLETCHER 21.
Página 32
... perhaps a slight wavering in the outlines of Celia's character to- wards the end , the play is a delightful romance in dramatic form , stirring with war and the hot braveries of the court , love and lust , the honour of soldiers and ...
... perhaps a slight wavering in the outlines of Celia's character to- wards the end , the play is a delightful romance in dramatic form , stirring with war and the hot braveries of the court , love and lust , the honour of soldiers and ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Términos y frases comunes
acter Addison Amintor Aphra Behn Arbuthnot Aubrey Beardsley Beaumont and Fletcher beauty Behn Behn's Berkeley Bolingbroke called character charm Chesterfield comedy confession court criticism cynicism death doubt drama Duke Duke of Wharton Dunciad England English Epistle essay Euripides evil fact feeling fools friendship genius Gray Halifax heart Hervey Hippolytus honour human nature imagination judgement Katherine Philips kind Lady Mary Lady Mary's least letters literary literature live Lord Lord Hervey lost lovers Maid's Tragedy malice mankind ment mind Montagu moral never Oroonoko passion philosophy play poem poet poetry political Pope Pope's Queen Sarah Drew satire scene sense society soul spirit Stephen Duck story Swift tenderness thing Thomas Tickell thou thought tion to-day touch tragedy true truth Twickenham verse virtue Walpole Wharton Whigs whole woman words Wortley write wrote ye's