An Enquiry Into the Life and Writings of HomerE. Dilly, at the Rose and Crown in the Poultry, near the Mansion-House, 1757 - 346 strán (strany) |
Vyhľadávanie v obsahu knihy
Výsledky 1 - 5 z 42.
Strana 2
... mean Subject , by addreffing them to your Lord- Ship . IT is HOMER , My Lord , and a Question concerning him which has been looked upon as hitherto unrefolved : " By what Fate or Dif < c cc pofition of things it has happened , that None ...
... mean Subject , by addreffing them to your Lord- Ship . IT is HOMER , My Lord , and a Question concerning him which has been looked upon as hitherto unrefolved : " By what Fate or Dif < c cc pofition of things it has happened , that None ...
Strana 19
... means Chalcis , Co- rinth , and Mycena were the first opulent Ci- ties after the Isles . Riches foon produced Sub- ordination ; the lefs powerful being contented with the Protection of the Rich and Brave ; and thefe , on the other hand ...
... means Chalcis , Co- rinth , and Mycena were the first opulent Ci- ties after the Isles . Riches foon produced Sub- ordination ; the lefs powerful being contented with the Protection of the Rich and Brave ; and thefe , on the other hand ...
Strana 25
... mean , or abfurd . But let us be in- genuous , My Lord , and confefs , that while the Moderns admire nothing but Pomp , and can think nothing Great or Beautiful , but what is the Produce of Wealth , they exclude them- felves from the ...
... mean , or abfurd . But let us be in- genuous , My Lord , and confefs , that while the Moderns admire nothing but Pomp , and can think nothing Great or Beautiful , but what is the Produce of Wealth , they exclude them- felves from the ...
Strana 26
... mean the pub- lick Tranquillity and good Order ; but incapa- ble of giving delight in Fiction or Poetry . By this time , your Lordship fees I am in the cafe of a noble Hiftorian ; who having related the conftant Superiority his Greeks ...
... mean the pub- lick Tranquillity and good Order ; but incapa- ble of giving delight in Fiction or Poetry . By this time , your Lordship fees I am in the cafe of a noble Hiftorian ; who having related the conftant Superiority his Greeks ...
Strana 31
... mean , are both Italians , who had the happiness to see the golden Age of Learning in that Country , the Pontificat of Leo X. PIETRO BEMBO was of a noble Family in Ve- nice ; his early Merit recommended him to Leo , who loved to fill ...
... mean , are both Italians , who had the happiness to see the golden Age of Learning in that Country , the Pontificat of Leo X. PIETRO BEMBO was of a noble Family in Ve- nice ; his early Merit recommended him to Leo , who loved to fill ...
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Časté výrazy a frázy
Achilles Æneid Afia againſt Agamemnon ancient Apollo appears Arts Bard becauſe Cadix Cauſe Character Circumftances Coaft Coaſt cou'd Country Crete Cuſtoms defcribed Defcription Egypt Egyptian Ephorus Eumolpus faid fame fays feems fettled fhew fhould fing firft firſt fome ftill ftrange fuch fung fuppofe Gods greateſt Grecian Greece Greeks Hero Hiftorian Hiftory himſelf Homer Honour Hymns ibid Iliad inftructed invented Iſlands itſelf juſt Language Learning likewife Little Iliad Mafters Mankind Manners moft moſt Mufes Mufick muſt Name natural Neceffity Numbers obferved Oracle Orpheus paffed Paffions Palamedes Perfons Phenician Philofopher Pleaſure Poem Poet Poetry prefent Priam publick racters raiſe reafon Rife Sect ſeems ſpeak Strabo Suidas Telchines Thebes thefe themſelves theſe thing thofe thoſe Thracians thro tion Trojan Trojan War Troy Ulyffes underſtand uſed Verfe whofe whoſe Wonder wou'd δὲ ἐκ ἐν καὶ περὶ τὰ τὰς τὴν τὸ τοῖς τὸν
Populárne pasáže
Strana 30 - En resolución, todos los poetas antiguos escribieron en la lengua que mamaron en la leche, y no fueron a buscar las extranjeras para declarar la alteza de sus conceptos...
Strana 72 - That of all the members of mankind that live within the compass of a thousand years, for one man that is born capable of making a great poet, there may be a thousand born capable of making as great generals and ministers of state as any in story.
Strana 98 - As for the gods whence each of them was descended, or whether they were always in being, or under what shape or form they existed, the Greeks knew nothing till very lately. Hesiod and Homer were, I believe, about four hundred years older than myself, and no more, and these are the men who made a theogony for the Greeks ; who gave the gods their appellations, defined their qualities, appointed their honours, and described their forms ; as for the poets, who are said to have lived before these men,...
Strana 153 - D'Avenant had rejected the marvellous from his poem — that is, the machinery of the epic : he had resolved to compose a tale of human beings for men. ' ' This was," says Blackwall, another of the classical flock, "like lopping off a man's limb, and then putting him upon running races." Our formal critics are quite lively in their dulness on our " adventurer." But poets, in the crisis of a poetical revolution, are more legitimate judges than all such critics. Waller and Cowley applaud D'Avenant...
Strana 101 - Fuit haec sapientia quondam, Publica privatis secernere, sacra profanis; Concubitu prohibere vago ; dare jura maritis ; Oppida moliri ; leges incidere ligno : Sic honor et nomen divinis vatibus atque 400 Carminibus venit.
Strana 35 - Subject ftill remaining to us, if we will quit our Towns, and look upon it : We find it, accordingly, nobly executed by many of the Moderns, and the...
Strana 260 - The Phenician accounts of thefe enchanting Creatures ; their telling how ravifhingly they fung, and how many Crews had been loft thro' their means, was ground fufficient for the Poet : They both gave him a foundation for his Tale, and fcope to work it up in the fymbolical Egyptian manner, until it loft its Specialities, and from a private Story, became capable of a general Application. THERE were feveral Syrens up and down the Coaft, who waited for the paffing Ships, and for that end took their ftations...
Strana 269 - Whose waves of torrent fire inflame with rage. Far off from these, a slow and silent stream, Lethe, the...
Strana 25 - But let us be ingenuous, my lord, and confess, that while the moderns admire nothing but pomp, and can think nothing great or beautiful, but what is the produce of wealth, they exclude themselves from the pleasantest and most natural images that adorned the old poetry. State and form disguise man; and wealth and luxury disguise nature.
Strana 32 - Triffino defcribes Italy, and dwells on Lombardy. He has even attempted Fable , and interwoven allegorical Stories of Life and Morals, with the Body of the Narration. But after all, the native Italian Manners are loft ; and the high Spirit and fecret Force which bewitches a Reader, and dazzles his Eyes, that he he can fee no Faults in Dante and Ariojlo, isSect.