John DrydenDryden's poetry is straightforward, bold, and energetic. He was in the public eye for some forty years, holding positions at court for a long period of time. He was indisputably perceived as the leading writer of his day. He excelled in all the types of writing practiced at the time. He wrote more, and in more genres than anyone. He accumulated to himself (it is a odd distinction) a huge mass of attacks, ranging from the reasoned to the scabrous. Dryden explained his attitudes and intentions in a large number of prologues, epilogues, prefaces, defences, and vindications-thereby quite casually producing the first body of what we now call 'criticism' in English. And yet his life and character remain something of a mystery. |
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Page 109
... Ben Jonson's tragedies - in Catiline and Sejanus sometimes thirty or forty lines ( I mean besides the chorus , or the monologues , which , by the way , showed Ben no enemy to this way of writing , especially if you look upon his Sad ...
... Ben Jonson's tragedies - in Catiline and Sejanus sometimes thirty or forty lines ( I mean besides the chorus , or the monologues , which , by the way , showed Ben no enemy to this way of writing , especially if you look upon his Sad ...
Page 111
... Ben Jonson before he wrote Every Man in his Humour . ' Their plots were generally more regular than Shakespeare's , especially those which were made before Beaumont's death , and they understood and imitated the conversation of ...
... Ben Jonson before he wrote Every Man in his Humour . ' Their plots were generally more regular than Shakespeare's , especially those which were made before Beaumont's death , and they understood and imitated the conversation of ...
Page 114
... Ben Jonson , to whose play I now return . ' Besides Morose , there are at least nine or ten different characters and humours in The Silent Woman , all which persons have several concernments of their own , yet are all used by the poet ...
... Ben Jonson , to whose play I now return . ' Besides Morose , there are at least nine or ten different characters and humours in The Silent Woman , all which persons have several concernments of their own , yet are all used by the poet ...
Contents
To John Hoddesdon on his Divine Epigrams I | 1 |
Astraea Redux | 9 |
Absalom and Achitophel | 177 |
Copyright | |
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Absalom and Achitophel Aeneas Aeneid ancient Arcite Aristotle arms bear beauty behold Ben Jonson betwixt blessed blood breast Caeneus Chaucer Cinyras courser cried crime crown death Dryden e'en earth English eyes fair fame fate father fear fight fire flames force Georgics give goddess gods grace Greek ground hand haste head heart heaven honour Iliad John Dryden Jove kind king labour leave light live lord lover Lucretius maid Metamorphoses mighty mind mortal muse nature never night numbers o'er once Ovid pain Palamon passion Pindar Pirithous plain play pleased poem poet praise Priam prince pursue queen race rage rest rhyme Roman sacred Satire of Juvenal seas Sejanus sighed sight sire skies soul stood sweet sword tears thee Theseus thou thought translation Twas verse Virgil vows wife wind words youth