The Classical Journal, Том 26A. J. Valpay., 1822 |
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... poet , of whom it would be more difficult to give a translation at once faithful to the original , and acceptable to the English reader , than Persius . Even in his own language , it must be confessed , he is not the most inviting of ...
... poet , of whom it would be more difficult to give a translation at once faithful to the original , and acceptable to the English reader , than Persius . Even in his own language , it must be confessed , he is not the most inviting of ...
Страница 2
... poets in both languages . And hence it is , that imitations of the above writers , in which the outline of the ... poet himself , and of his subject ; the little interest with which modern readers regard the events and characters ...
... poets in both languages . And hence it is , that imitations of the above writers , in which the outline of the ... poet himself , and of his subject ; the little interest with which modern readers regard the events and characters ...
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... poet flippant and inconsequential . I come now to Sir W. Drummond . This is a work of great elegance ; spirited and poetical , and polished into a degree of smoothness seldom attained . But Sir William Drummond declares , that his ...
... poet flippant and inconsequential . I come now to Sir W. Drummond . This is a work of great elegance ; spirited and poetical , and polished into a degree of smoothness seldom attained . But Sir William Drummond declares , that his ...
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... poet justly attributes the corruption of forensic eloquence , and the debility of metrical composition . The following passage on this subject , from one of the old gramma- rians , is highly curious . Quid ' ( says Diomede , treating of ...
... poet justly attributes the corruption of forensic eloquence , and the debility of metrical composition . The following passage on this subject , from one of the old gramma- rians , is highly curious . Quid ' ( says Diomede , treating of ...
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... poet , may be felt but cannot be expressed . We give his translation of the whole passage . O grovelling souls ! and void of things divine ! Why bring our passions to the Immortals ' shrine , And judge , from what this CARNAL SENSE ...
... poet , may be felt but cannot be expressed . We give his translation of the whole passage . O grovelling souls ! and void of things divine ! Why bring our passions to the Immortals ' shrine , And judge , from what this CARNAL SENSE ...
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Чести термини и фразе
aliis ancient apud Arabic atque autem Bentley cæsura called criticism cujus Deity digamma docet edition Egyptian enim erat erui etiam Eubulus Fouta-Toro Greek hæc hanc haud Hebrew Heyne hinc Homer Ibn Haukal Ibn Khordadbeh idem igitur Iliad illa inter ipse Latin Manilius mihi modo moral evidence neque nihil nisi nunc observations olim omnia opinion Ovid passage Persian Persius Plutarch poem poet potest Priscian quæ quam quibus quid quidem quod quoque quum reader says signifying Simplicius Sophocles splendere Suidas sunt Tafilelt tamen Thucydides tion translation verb verba vero verse videtur vowel Wolfius words writer ἂν γὰρ δὲ διὰ εἰ εἶναι εἰς ἐν ἐπὶ καὶ μὲν μὴ μοι οἱ οὐ οὐκ τὰ ταῦτα τε τὴν τῆς τὸ τοῖς τὸν τοῦ τοὺς τῷ τῶν ὡς
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