The Works of the Right Honourable Joseph Addison, Bind 3George Bell & Son, 1877 |
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Side 148
... proper measure ; but when an hero is to be pulled down and degraded , it is done best in doggerel . If Hudibras had been set out with as much wit and humour in heroic verse as he is in doggerel , he would have made a much more agreeable ...
... proper measure ; but when an hero is to be pulled down and degraded , it is done best in doggerel . If Hudibras had been set out with as much wit and humour in heroic verse as he is in doggerel , he would have made a much more agreeable ...
Side 186
... proper sentiments for an assembly of Grecian generals , than for Milton to di- versify his infernal council with proper characters , and in- spire them with a variety of sentiments . The loves of Dido and Æneas are only copies of what ...
... proper sentiments for an assembly of Grecian generals , than for Milton to di- versify his infernal council with proper characters , and in- spire them with a variety of sentiments . The loves of Dido and Æneas are only copies of what ...
Side 414
... proper ideas , and what ad- ditional strength and beauty they are capable of receiving from conjunction with others . The fancy must be warm , to retain the print of those images it hath received from out- ward objects ; and the ...
... proper ideas , and what ad- ditional strength and beauty they are capable of receiving from conjunction with others . The fancy must be warm , to retain the print of those images it hath received from out- ward objects ; and the ...
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action Adam admired affection angels appear beautiful body called character circumstances consider conversation critics death delight described desire discover earth English enter everything expression fable fall father give given greater greatest hand happiness head heart heaven Homer human ideas imagination kind language learned letter light likewise live look lost mankind manner means meet mentioned Milton mind nature never notice observed occasion opinion Paradise particular passage passed passion perfection perhaps person pleased pleasure poem poet present produce proper raised reader reason received reflections represented rises says secret seems sense sentiments short sight soul speak speech spirit taken tells temper things thought tion told turn virtue whole writing