John Dryden: The Critical HeritageHelen and Kinsley Kinsley Routledge, 2013 M06 17 - 424 páginas The Critical Heritage gathers together a large body of critical sources on major figures in literature. Each volume presents contemporary responses to a writer's work, enabling students and researchers to read for themselves, for example, comments on early performances of Shakespeare's plays, or reactions to the first publication of Jane Austen's novels. The carefully selected sources range from landmark essays in the history of criticism to journalism and contemporary opinion, and little published documentary material such as letters and diaries. Significant pieces of criticism from later periods are also included, in order to demonstrate the fluctuations in an author's reputation. Each volume contains an introduction to the writer's published works, a selected bibliography, and an index of works, authors and subjects. The Collected Critical Heritage set will be available as a set of 68 volumes and the series will also be available in mini sets selected by period (in slipcase boxes) and as individual volumes. |
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Página 10
... reason for including passages from Dryden . He often reports the oral criticism of court , salon , and coffee - house , which would otherwise be lost . Thus he tells us that ' a Royal Judg ' approved Secret - Love , and what the ...
... reason for including passages from Dryden . He often reports the oral criticism of court , salon , and coffee - house , which would otherwise be lost . Thus he tells us that ' a Royal Judg ' approved Secret - Love , and what the ...
Página 12
... Reasons by a long Scroll of other Peoples Author- ities , which is certainly a pleasant Condescension ; but such is the fantastick Humility of pedantick Pride ! And yet Mr. Collier is very right , and very sincere in his Reasons , and ...
... Reasons by a long Scroll of other Peoples Author- ities , which is certainly a pleasant Condescension ; but such is the fantastick Humility of pedantick Pride ! And yet Mr. Collier is very right , and very sincere in his Reasons , and ...
Página 18
... reason or other , be worth reading ; that his bombast and his indelicacy , how- ever disgusting , were not without their use to any one who took an interest in our literary history ; that — in short , there are a thousand reflections ...
... reason or other , be worth reading ; that his bombast and his indelicacy , how- ever disgusting , were not without their use to any one who took an interest in our literary history ; that — in short , there are a thousand reflections ...
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... reason may reject their influence.59 Reviewing Dryden's treatment of the passions , and indeed his whole ' poetical character ' , Scott provides a portrait in softer lines and warmer colours than Johnson's ( No. 83 As ; Johnson , No ...
... reason may reject their influence.59 Reviewing Dryden's treatment of the passions , and indeed his whole ' poetical character ' , Scott provides a portrait in softer lines and warmer colours than Johnson's ( No. 83 As ; Johnson , No ...
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... reason to guess so soon at the Queen's Passion she being a person so much above him, and by the suffrages of all her people, already destin'd to Lysimantes: Besides, that he was prepossessed, (as the Queen somewhere hints it to him) ...
... reason to guess so soon at the Queen's Passion she being a person so much above him, and by the suffrages of all her people, already destin'd to Lysimantes: Besides, that he was prepossessed, (as the Queen somewhere hints it to him) ...
Contenido
14 | |
29 | |
38 | |
12 | 54 |
14 | 69 |
Mr Dreyden Vindicated 1673 | 80 |
17 | 88 |
19 | 115 |
Verses on Virgil 1697 | 217 |
DRYDEN on his Virgil 1697 | 224 |
Alexanders Feast 1697 | 226 |
Immorality and profaneness 1698 | 227 |
Fables Ancient and Modern 1700 | 240 |
On a portrait of Dryden 1700 | 241 |
Farce and heroicks 1700 | 242 |
Drydens unnatural flights 1701 | 243 |
22 | 121 |
26 | 128 |
Verses on The Medall 1682 | 136 |
30 | 143 |
Dryden the Tory poet 1682 | 151 |
SHADWELL on The Duke of Guise 1683 | 156 |
A deists tribute 1683 | 159 |
DRYDEN on his History of the League 1684 | 162 |
Odi imitatores servum pecus c 1685 | 163 |
PRIOR parodies The Hind and the Panther 1687 | 167 |
Gentle George reads The Hind and the Panther 1687 1689 | 174 |
CLIFFORDs poison pen 1687 | 175 |
Reflections on The Hind and the Panther 1687 | 186 |
Drydens rhyming poetry 1690 | 190 |
Objections to Don Sebastian 168990 | 191 |
Two actors in 1690 1739 | 193 |
MILBOURNE blows hot and cold 1690 1698 | 196 |
LANGBAINES observations and remarks 1691 | 200 |
Dryden and Congreve 1693 | 203 |
Congreve to Mr Dryden on his translation of Persius 1693 | 205 |
HIGGONS on Persius 1693 | 207 |
DRYDEN on Examen Poeticum 1693 | 208 |
DENNIS on Oedipus 1693 | 209 |
So Tribute from ADDISON 1693 | 213 |
SI DRYDEN on The Satires of Juvenalis 1693 | 215 |
DRYDEN on Love Triumphant 1694 | 216 |
SWIFT on Dryden 1704 1710 1735 | 245 |
Verses on Drydens Fables 1706 | 248 |
The Spectator 1711 1712 | 253 |
DENNIS on Dryden 1711 1715 1717 1720 1728 | 257 |
GARTHs memorial to Dryden 1717 | 261 |
CONGREVEs memoir 1717 | 263 |
DENNIS on All for Love 1719 | 266 |
ALEXANDER POPE on Dryden 173043 | 269 |
THOMAS GRAY on Dryden 1742 1754 1765 | 270 |
Instant criticism 1744 | 273 |
JOSEPH WARTON on Dryden 1756 1782 | 274 |
Applauding hands and dry eyes 1759 | 278 |
Sigismunda and Timotheus 1761 1763 1764 | 280 |
ADAM SMITH On The Spanish Fryar 1763 | 282 |
Comments by WALPOLE 177587 | 283 |
DR JOHNSON on Dryden 177981 1750 | 285 |
Comments by COWPER 1780 1782 1784 | 313 |
A professorial view 1783 | 314 |
Teutonic strictures 1808 | 316 |
MALONE on Dryden 1800 | 317 |
No great favourite of WORDSWORTHS 1805 | 323 |
Cause for alarm 1805 1806 | 325 |
The great appraisal 1808 | 328 |
LORD MONBODDO on Drydens Odes n d | 401 |
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Términos y frases comunes
admiration Almanzor ancient appear Audience Author BAYES beautiful better bold called Cause Censure character Comedy Conquest criticism defence Dryden edition English Essay excellent expression Extract eyes Fables Fancy faults force Friend Genius give Granada hand head Hero Heroick honour hope interest John Johnson judge Judgment kind King Ladies language late least leave less light lines live Lord Love manner mean mind Muse nature never Numbers object observe once opinion original pass passion perhaps Persius persons piece Play Poem Poet poetry Pope praise Preface present Prologue Prose published Queen reader reason Reputation Rhyme satire Scene Scott seems sense sometimes speak spirit Stage style tell thee thing thou thought Tragedy translation true turn Verse Virgil whole World write written