The Critical Works of John Dennis, Band 2Johns Hopkins Press, 1964 |
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Seite lxxxii
... rules rigorously , 39 and he himself set the pattern of a critic who based hist observations upon taste and sense rather than the standard of the rules . Ac- cordingly his criticism commended itself to Henry Felton , who found the ...
... rules rigorously , 39 and he himself set the pattern of a critic who based hist observations upon taste and sense rather than the standard of the rules . Ac- cordingly his criticism commended itself to Henry Felton , who found the ...
Seite lxxxiii
... rules Dennis firmly took his stand . He was convinced that the rules were fundamentally sound and that they were necessary if poetry was to be an art rather than an expression of purposeless and undigested observation . The antagonism ...
... rules Dennis firmly took his stand . He was convinced that the rules were fundamentally sound and that they were necessary if poetry was to be an art rather than an expression of purposeless and undigested observation . The antagonism ...
Seite xc
... rules of tragedy , the epic , and comedy , it be- comes difficult to think of him as a mechanical critic . The indispensable rules , as he conceived them , were few in number and , except for the doctrine of the distinction of genres ...
... rules of tragedy , the epic , and comedy , it be- comes difficult to think of him as a mechanical critic . The indispensable rules , as he conceived them , were few in number and , except for the doctrine of the distinction of genres ...
Inhalt
Introduction | vii |
An Essay on the Genius and Writings of Shakespear 1712 | 1 |
To the Spectator on Poetical Justice 1712 | 18 |
Urheberrecht | |
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acquainted Action Addison admirable Ancients appear Aristotle Author Beauties Ben Johnson Boileau Cæsar Cato Character Cibber Comedy Comick Congreve Conscious Lovers Coriolanus critic Dacier Dennis's Dramatick Dryden Dunciad edition English Epick Essay Fable Faults Fools Friend Genius Gentleman Gildon give Homer Honour Horace Hudibras ibid Iliad Imitation John Dennis Juba Judgment King Liberty Lord Lord Roscommon Love manner Milton Moral Nature never noble Numbers oblig'd observe Opinion Original Letters Paradise Lost Passage Passion Persons Play pleas'd Poem Poet poetic justice Poetry Pope Pope's Portius Preface pretend probably Prose publick publish'd published Rape Reader Reason Remarks ridiculous Roman rules Satire says Scene Sempronius Sense Shakespear shew shewn Sir John Edgar Soul Spectator Spirit Stage Steele sublime Syphax taste Tatler Temple of Fame Theatre thee thing thou thought thro tion Tragedy Translation true Verse Virgil Virtue Walter Moyle World writ write wrote Wycherley