English Versions of Roman Satire in the Earlier Eighteenth CenturyUniversity of Delaware Press, 2007 - 271 ページ This book discusses Imitations of the ancient Roman verse satirists Horace, Juvenal, and Perseus published in Britain in the first half of the eighteenth century. It endeavors to put major writers such as Alexander Pope and Samuel Johnson in the context of lesser writers of the period. It also devotes attention to other canonical writers such as Jonathan Swift, Henry Fielding, and Christopher Smart. |
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... usual eighteenth - century text would have read . Hence I give " in- vidiae . ' noster ludos ... " at Hor . Sat. 2.6.47 , not Bentley's corrected punctuation . Similarly , at Juvenal 6.158 I give " dedit nunc " instead of Housman's now ...
... usual eighteenth - century text would have read . Hence I give " in- vidiae . ' noster ludos ... " at Hor . Sat. 2.6.47 , not Bentley's corrected punctuation . Similarly , at Juvenal 6.158 I give " dedit nunc " instead of Housman's now ...
32 ページ
... usual , here I shall focus on what Swift does with Horace's original , rather than on what his Imitations tell us about Swift himself either as a man or as a satirist.1 But as we shall see , some of Swift's best effects come from his ...
... usual , here I shall focus on what Swift does with Horace's original , rather than on what his Imitations tell us about Swift himself either as a man or as a satirist.1 But as we shall see , some of Swift's best effects come from his ...
34 ページ
... usual Roman idiom for carelessness concerning personal hygiene — gave Swift the clues he needed to end the poem by cataloguing the disgusting habits of a Junto of the most odious Whig politicians , especially the notorious atheist ...
... usual Roman idiom for carelessness concerning personal hygiene — gave Swift the clues he needed to end the poem by cataloguing the disgusting habits of a Junto of the most odious Whig politicians , especially the notorious atheist ...
36 ページ
... usual relation between his witty self and a naive butt seems a more delicate compliment.13 Swift imitated only the latter part of the epistle ( twenty - five years later Alexander Pope was to render the first part in Swift's style ) ...
... usual relation between his witty self and a naive butt seems a more delicate compliment.13 Swift imitated only the latter part of the epistle ( twenty - five years later Alexander Pope was to render the first part in Swift's style ) ...
53 ページ
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目次
23 | |
32 | |
Imitators Imitating Swift Imitating Horace | 53 |
Alexander Popes Earlier Imitations of Horace | 64 |
Responses to Popes Earlier Imitations | 85 |
Pope and Horace The Later Period | 102 |
Imitations of Roman Satire in the Later 1730s | 136 |
The Imitation from 1740 to 1750 | 169 |
Conclusion | 212 |
Appendix | 223 |
Notes | 228 |
255 | |
265 | |
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多く使われている語句
Alexander Pope allusions appeared Augustus become better called cause century Charles classical common contemporary course court critical discuss early edition eighteenth eighteenth-century England English Epistle example Fielding follow George give hope Horace's Horatian Human Wishes Imitations of Horace James John Johnson Juvenal Juvenal's kind King later Latin least leave literary literature living London Lord Maecenas mind moral never offered opening original Oxford passage patron perhaps Persius person poem poet poetic poetry political Pope Pope's Pope's Imitation published quoted readers refers remarks Robert Roman Rome Samuel satire satirist scarcely seems shows Smart suggests Swift taste tell thought tion Tiresias translation true turn University Press usual Vanity of Human verse Walpole write young