Eighteenth Century Poetry & ProseLouis Ignatius Bredvold Ronald Press Company, 1956 - 1274 pagini The purpose os this volume is to provide representative selections from English prose and poetry of the eighteenth century for undergraduate courses in that period. In this second edition of the anthology the editors have expanded the contents considerably. Additions have been made from Addison, Pope, Swift, Young, Smart, Burke, and Reynolds, with Blake's comments. The extensive notes and introductions should assist the beginning student to understand the texts, but it is hoped that they will also lead him to explore further in the works listed in the bibliographies. |
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Pagina 189
... things past and things conceived ; and so the ques- tion is only this : whether things that have place in the imagination , may not as properly be said to exist , as those that are seated in the memory , which may be justly held in the ...
... things past and things conceived ; and so the ques- tion is only this : whether things that have place in the imagination , may not as properly be said to exist , as those that are seated in the memory , which may be justly held in the ...
Pagina 320
... things with the highest perfection of goodness , as well as of wisdom and power , must necessarily believe virtue to be naturally good and advan- tageous . For what could more strongly imply an unjust ordinance , a blot and imperfection ...
... things with the highest perfection of goodness , as well as of wisdom and power , must necessarily believe virtue to be naturally good and advan- tageous . For what could more strongly imply an unjust ordinance , a blot and imperfection ...
Pagina 1177
... things to which they are applied.9 We may let pass those things which are at once subjects of taste and sense , and which , having as much certainty as the senses themselves , give no oc- casion to inquiry or dispute . The nat- ural ...
... things to which they are applied.9 We may let pass those things which are at once subjects of taste and sense , and which , having as much certainty as the senses themselves , give no oc- casion to inquiry or dispute . The nat- ural ...
Cuprins
SAMUEL BUTLER | 1 |
A Bumpkin or CountrySquire | 11 |
JOHN WILMOT EARL OF ROCHESTER | 31 |
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admiration ancient appear Bargrave beauty Ben Jonson blank verse blessed charms Christopher Smart court creature death delight divine English eral eyes fair fame fancy fate fear genius give grace hand happy hear heart Heaven honour hope Houyhnhnms Hudibras human Imlac Jebusites Johnson kind King labour lady laws learning live look Lord Lubberkin lyre mankind ment mind moral Muse nature ne'er never night numbers nymph o'er observed pain pass passion Pekuah persons Pindaric play pleased pleasure poem poet poetry praise pride prince Rasselas reason rest rhyme round scene sense shade Silent Woman smiles song soul spleen sweet talk taste tell thee things Thomas Warton thou thought tion truth turn Veal verse Virgil virtue Whig William Shenstone words write Yahoos youth