Blackwood's Magazine, Volumen 46W. Blackwood., 1839 |
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Página 3
... there is any impassable limit in critical geo- graphy - any spot where the poet or the philosopher may pause , as at the Pillars of Hercules , and say- NO . CCLXXXV . VOL . XLVI . A of the eighteenth century were com- posed ; and of.
... there is any impassable limit in critical geo- graphy - any spot where the poet or the philosopher may pause , as at the Pillars of Hercules , and say- NO . CCLXXXV . VOL . XLVI . A of the eighteenth century were com- posed ; and of.
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... poets ; that of the dramatist - mild , gentle , sincerely pious , speaking from his own heart , and speaking to ours ; that of the lyric poet - vain , turbulent , unconscien- tious , immersed in literary intrigues , just as ready to ...
... poets ; that of the dramatist - mild , gentle , sincerely pious , speaking from his own heart , and speaking to ours ; that of the lyric poet - vain , turbulent , unconscien- tious , immersed in literary intrigues , just as ready to ...
Página 9
... poet obviously drew its nourishment from an imagination naturally highly poetical still further excited by the romantic and occasionally extravagant tone of the Spanish drama , which had been his favourite study . That union of the ...
... poet obviously drew its nourishment from an imagination naturally highly poetical still further excited by the romantic and occasionally extravagant tone of the Spanish drama , which had been his favourite study . That union of the ...
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... poet . Villemain has a long parallel between the Pharsalia and the Henriade : in which he gives the preference , on the whole , to the latter poem . We grant to Voltaire the merit of better taste , for he has no- thing of the tumid and ...
... poet . Villemain has a long parallel between the Pharsalia and the Henriade : in which he gives the preference , on the whole , to the latter poem . We grant to Voltaire the merit of better taste , for he has no- thing of the tumid and ...
Página 13
... poet or a philosopher . To us he appears to far more advantage in his Contés his graceful Vers de Société , and in his Romans , than in any of his more elaborate compositions . What- ever may be thought of the tendency of his romances ...
... poet or a philosopher . To us he appears to far more advantage in his Contés his graceful Vers de Société , and in his Romans , than in any of his more elaborate compositions . What- ever may be thought of the tendency of his romances ...
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