| 1746 - Počet stránok 532
...Machines, where they could not account for Events fo naturally as they (hould : whereas in Reality, in the Works of the Ancients, Nature and Machinery generally go Hand in Hand; and chiefly ferve to manifeft each other : as our Author proves by feveral Inftances from the /Eneid. In... | |
| Virgil - 1778 - Počet stránok 526
...general epithet appropriated to Neptune, on any occafion í I94. He /poke, and fpealiing cbac'd, Уг.] " In the works of the ancients, nature and machinery...generally go hand in hand, and ferve chiefly to manifeft one another. Thus, for inftance, in the ftorm, in the very beginning of the ^Eneid ; thefe imaginary... | |
| John Dryden - 1800 - Počet stránok 712
...and surprising ; secondly, that the poets were too apt to introduce machines, or supernatural causes, where they could not naturally account for events:...nature and machinery generally go hand in hand, and serve chiefly to manifest each other. Thus in the storm [raised by /Kohis at Juno's request] imaginary... | |
| John Dryden - 1800 - Počet stránok 674
...and surprising; secondly, that the poets were too apt to introduce machines, or supernatural causes, where they could not naturally account for events:...nature and machinery generally go hand in hand, and serve chiefly to manifest each other. Thus in the storm [raised by /Eolus at Juno's request] imaginary... | |
| John Dryden - 1800 - Počet stránok 674
...and surprising ; secondly, that the poets were too apt to introduce machines, or supernatural causes, where they could not naturally account for events: whereas in the works of the ancients, nature and ma. chinery generally go hand in hand, and serve chiefly to manifest each other. Thus in the storm... | |
| John Dryden - 1800 - Počet stránok 662
...and surprising ; secondly, that the poets were too apt to introduce machines, or supernatural causes, where they could not naturally account for events : whereas in the works of the ancients, nature arid machinery generally go hand in hand, and serve chiefly to manifest each other. Thus in the storm... | |
| |