Lives of the English Poets: Cowley-DrydenClarendon Press, 1905 - English poetry |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 54
Page 2
... rhyme and dance of the numbers ; so that I think I had read him all over before I was twelve years old , and was thus made a poet as im- mediately as a child is made an eunuch . Eng . Poets , ix . 122 . Lamb , describing ' an old great ...
... rhyme and dance of the numbers ; so that I think I had read him all over before I was twelve years old , and was thus made a poet as im- mediately as a child is made an eunuch . Eng . Poets , ix . 122 . Lamb , describing ' an old great ...
Page 19
... rhyme , instead of writing poetry they only wrote verses , and very often such verses as stood the trial of the finger better than of the ear ; for the modulation was so imperfect that they were only found to be verses by counting the ...
... rhyme , instead of writing poetry they only wrote verses , and very often such verses as stood the trial of the finger better than of the ear ; for the modulation was so imperfect that they were only found to be verses by counting the ...
Page 44
... rhyming prose : ' But in this thankless world the giver [ givers ] Is [ Are ] envied even by the receiver [ receivers ] ; ' Tis now the cheap and frugal_fashion Rather to hide than own [ pay ] the obligation : Nay , ' tis much worse ...
... rhyming prose : ' But in this thankless world the giver [ givers ] Is [ Are ] envied even by the receiver [ receivers ] ; ' Tis now the cheap and frugal_fashion Rather to hide than own [ pay ] the obligation : Nay , ' tis much worse ...
Page 60
... rhymes are very often made by pronouns or particles , or the like unimportant words , which disappoint the ear and destroy ... rhyme which terminates them . In his rugged untuneable numbers are conveyed sentiments the most strained and ...
... rhymes are very often made by pronouns or particles , or the like unimportant words , which disappoint the ear and destroy ... rhyme which terminates them . In his rugged untuneable numbers are conveyed sentiments the most strained and ...
Page 75
... rhyme is not competent ; so broken , it loses all its music ; of which any person may convince him- self by reading a page only of any of our poets anterior to Denham , Waller and Dryden . ' Southey's Cowper , xi . Preface , p . 13. See ...
... rhyme is not competent ; so broken , it loses all its music ; of which any person may convince him- self by reading a page only of any of our poets anterior to Denham , Waller and Dryden . ' Southey's Cowper , xi . Preface , p . 13. See ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Absalom and Achitophel acted ADDISON admired Aeneid afterwards Anec Ante appears Aubrey Biog Birkbeck Hill blank verse Boswell's Johnson Brief Lives Burnet Butler censure character Charles Clarendon Cowley Cowley's criticism Cromwell death delight Denham Diary Donne Duke Dunciad Earl edition elegance English Essay father friends genius George Birkbeck heroick Hist honour HORACE WALPOLE Hudibras Hurd's Cowley images imitation John John Milton King labour language Latin learned Letters lines Lord Malone Malone's Dryden Masson's Milton mind Misc nature never NIHIL numbers Otway Oxford Oxon Paradise Lost passage perhaps Philips play poetical poetry POPE Pope's praise Preface printed prose publick published quoted reader rhyme Rochester satire says seems shew Spectator Sprat stanza thing thou thought tion Tonson tragedy translation viii Virgil Waller Warton words write written wrote