The Works of the English Poets: With Prefaces, Biographical and Critical, Volume 27Samuel Johnson C. Bathurst, 1779 |
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Page 8
... these are acknowledged by all to be very fhining parts of the Poem . Whence it is that Quintilian , the beft judge in thefe matters , reckons him among the rhetoricians , rather than the poets , though he was certainly mafter of both these ...
... these are acknowledged by all to be very fhining parts of the Poem . Whence it is that Quintilian , the beft judge in thefe matters , reckons him among the rhetoricians , rather than the poets , though he was certainly mafter of both these ...
Page 9
... these offices in the first of which posts he exhibited to the people of Rome a fhow of gladiators at a vast expence . It was in this fun - fhine of life Lucan married Polla Argentaria , the daughter of Pollius Argentarius , a Roman ...
... these offices in the first of which posts he exhibited to the people of Rome a fhow of gladiators at a vast expence . It was in this fun - fhine of life Lucan married Polla Argentaria , the daughter of Pollius Argentarius , a Roman ...
Page 17
... these 66 reat patriots , that fell here facrifices to thy ambi- " tion . If there may be allowed any renown to a Roman Mufe , while Homer's verfes fhall be " thought worthy of praife , they that shall live after C 66 115 , " us , fhall ...
... these 66 reat patriots , that fell here facrifices to thy ambi- " tion . If there may be allowed any renown to a Roman Mufe , while Homer's verfes fhall be " thought worthy of praife , they that shall live after C 66 115 , " us , fhall ...
Page 18
... these gentlemen , that Lucan is not to be tried by thofe rules of an Epic Poem , which they have drawn from the Iliad or Æneid ; for if they allow him not the honour to be on the fame foot with Homer or Virgil , they must do him the ...
... these gentlemen , that Lucan is not to be tried by thofe rules of an Epic Poem , which they have drawn from the Iliad or Æneid ; for if they allow him not the honour to be on the fame foot with Homer or Virgil , they must do him the ...
Page 25
... these trifling parts of action would take off from the plea- fure and entertainment , which is the main fcope of that manner of writing . Thus the particulars of an army's march , the journal of a siege , or the fituation of a camp ...
... these trifling parts of action would take off from the plea- fure and entertainment , which is the main fcope of that manner of writing . Thus the particulars of an army's march , the journal of a siege , or the fituation of a camp ...
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The Works of the English Poets: With Prefaces, Biographical and Critical ... Samuel Johnson No preview available - 2020 |
Common terms and phrases
Æneid againſt amidſt arms Behold beneath blood bold Boötes brave breaſt Cæfar Cato's caufe cauſe Celtiberians chief Colchians command croud death diftant dreadful earth enfigns Euphrates Ev'n facred fafe faid fame fatal fate fear feas feek feems feen fhade fhall fhore fhould fide field fierce fight fink firft firſt fix'd flain flames flaughter fled flood foldier fome foon forfook fortune fought foul ftand ftill ftream ftrong fuch fupplies fwelling fword Gaul gods hafte hand himſelf hoftile horrid impious laſt Latian lefs length loft looſe Lucan moſt muſt Nero o'er paffage paſt peace Pharfalia Phocis plac'd plain Pompey Pompey's rage reft rifing riſe rofe Roman Rome Scythians ſhall ſhore ſkies ſky ſpoke ſpread ſprings ſtand ſtate ſtill ſtood Sulpitius Verulanus ſwift taſk thee thefe theſe thofe thoſe thou thouſand trembling vaft vanquish'd victor Virgil Whofe winds wrath yield
Popular passages
Page 66 - If dying mortals' doom they sing aright, No ghosts descend to dwell in dreadful night: No parting souls to grisly Pluto go, Nor seek the dreary, silent, shades below; But forth they fly, immortal in their kind, And other bodies in new worlds they find. Thus life for ever runs its endless race, And, like a line, death but divides the space — A stop, which can but for a moment last, A point between the future and the past.
Page 123 - Then, eager, caught an axe, and aimed a blow. Deep sunk, within a violated oak, The wounding edge, and thus the warrior spoke : — " Now, let no doubting hand the task decline ; Cut you the wood, and let the guilt be mine.
Page 6 - Homer, of a fwarm of bees hovering about them in their cradle, is likewife told of Lucan, and probably with equal truth: but whether true or not, it is a proof of the high efteem paid to him by the ancients, as a poet. He was hardly eight months old when he was brought from his native country to Rome...
Page 123 - To rise from earth, and spring with dusky green; With sparkling flames the trees unburning shine, And round their boles prodigious serpents twine. The pious worshippers approach not near, But shun their gods, and kneel with distant fear: The priest himself, when or the day or night Rolling have reach'd their full meridian height, Refrains the gloomy paths with wary feet, Dreading the demon of the grove to meet; Who, terrible to sight, at that fix'd hour Still treads the round about his dreary bower.
Page 53 - Since faith is broke, and leagues are fet afide, -\ Henceforth thou, goddefs Fortune, art my guide; > Let fate and war the great event decide.
Page 49 - twas a valour, restless, unconfined, Which no success could sate, nor limits bind ; 'Twas shame, a soldier's shame, untaught to yield, That blushed for nothing but an ill-fought field; Fierce in his hopes he was, nor knew to stay, Where vengeance or ambition led the way ; Still prodigal of war whene'er withstood, Nor...
Page 12 - Msenas, when with ivy bridles bound, She led the spotted lynx, then Evion rung around ; Evion from woods and floods repairing echos sound.
Page 48 - Still seemed he to possess and fill his place; But stood the shadow of what once he was ; So in the field with Ceres...
Page 124 - Massilians, from th' encompass'd wall, Rejoiced to see the sylvan honours fall : They hope such power can never prosper long, Nor think the patient gods will bear the wrong. The...
Page 67 - Thus Fear does half the work of lying Fame, And cowards thus their own misfortunes frame; By their own feigning fancies are betray'd, And groan beneath those ills themselves have Nor these alarms the crowd alone infest, [made.