Dryden's Aeneid and Its Seventeenth Century PredecessorsManchester University Press, 1960 - 278 من الصفحات |
المحتوى
General Introduction | 3 |
Sources of the Aeneid Book IV | 13 |
DRYDENS PREDECESSORS | 95 |
Didos Death | 99 |
John Vicars | 108 |
Robert Stapylton | 118 |
The two versions | 126 |
Godolphin and Waller | 138 |
DRYDEN | 181 |
General Merits of the Aeneid | 183 |
Political and Moral Passages | 197 |
The Coarsening of Tone | 208 |
Diction and Decorum | 220 |
Evidence from Nisus and Euryalus | 237 |
Metre | 246 |
Dryden on Virgil | 258 |
James Harrington | 146 |
Sir Robert Howard | 155 |
Sir John Denham | 159 |
The Earl of Lauderdale | 168 |
Dryden and the Tradition | 265 |
277 | |
278 | |
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عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
abode Absalom and Achitophel Aeneas Aeneid already appears arms Ascanius Augustan author of Didos Book borrowings breast Carthage charm couplet Denham diction Dido's Didos Death doth Drances effect elision English enjambment epic episode example eyes fame fate fear fire flame force fury Georgics give Godolphin gods hand Harrington heav'n heroic heroic couplets Hooker Howard imitation instance JOHN OGILBY Jove Juno language Latin Lauderdale and Dryden Lauderdale's less manner metre metrical metrist Mezentius Miss Hooker's night Nisus and Euryalus Noyes Ogilby Ogilby's original passage passion periphrases phrase poem poet poetic poetry political pow'r predecessors Prince prosody quae queen rage rendering rhetorical rhyme-words rhymes seas seems sense shore shows Sichaeus sister skies sort soul sound Stapylton style syllables syntax thee thou tion triplet Trojan Troy Turnus Tyrian verse versification Vicars Virgil Virgilian whilst whole winds words