Orlando Furioso, 第 1 巻G. Nicol, 1785 |
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xx ページ
... state read part of it to his friends , who gave it fo cool a reception , that he thought it ad- vifeable to change his purpofe , and treat his fub- ject in the fame manner as the other popular writers , or Romanzatori * , Thus Ariofto ...
... state read part of it to his friends , who gave it fo cool a reception , that he thought it ad- vifeable to change his purpofe , and treat his fub- ject in the fame manner as the other popular writers , or Romanzatori * , Thus Ariofto ...
lxvii ページ
... state , To tread the fordid path , that open lies To fields of wealth , where golden harvests rise . Thou wilt not force me to th ' ungrateful bar , Where ill - kept laws fupply the constant jar ; Or fix me there , long tedious days ...
... state , To tread the fordid path , that open lies To fields of wealth , where golden harvests rise . Thou wilt not force me to th ' ungrateful bar , Where ill - kept laws fupply the constant jar ; Or fix me there , long tedious days ...
xciv ページ
... state which the king of Naples had given him , followed in the midft of fix of the principal citizens clothed in green , with crowns of flowers on their heads ; after whom came the fenator , accompanied by the first men of the council ...
... state which the king of Naples had given him , followed in the midft of fix of the principal citizens clothed in green , with crowns of flowers on their heads ; after whom came the fenator , accompanied by the first men of the council ...
xcix ページ
... states- man Burleigh , on Queen Elizabeth's bounty to our own Spenfer , All this for a song ! Dolce relates , that he caufed the device of the serpent to be prefixed to the fecond edition of his poem ; but that in the third he changed ...
... states- man Burleigh , on Queen Elizabeth's bounty to our own Spenfer , All this for a song ! Dolce relates , that he caufed the device of the serpent to be prefixed to the fecond edition of his poem ; but that in the third he changed ...
cxvi ページ
... fo , because , as he believed that in another state men would know each other , he was impatient to meet again fo many friends that had gone before him . He was interred in the church of Saint Bene- dict 2 He cxvi THE LIFE OF ARIOSTO .
... fo , because , as he believed that in another state men would know each other , he was impatient to meet again fo many friends that had gone before him . He was interred in the church of Saint Bene- dict 2 He cxvi THE LIFE OF ARIOSTO .
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Æneid Aftolpho againſt Agramant Alcina Alphonfo Angelica appear'd Argalia Ariodantes Ariofto arms Behold Boyardo Bradamant breaſt brother Brunello cauſe Charlemain Chriſtian cloſe courfer courſe dame damfel death defcending defign'd defire duke Durindana enchanted eyes fafe faid fair fame fatire feas fecret feek feem'd feems feen fent Ferrara Ferrau fhall fhore fhould fide fight fince firft firſt flain fome foon foul Frontino fteed ftill fubject fuch fudden Furiofo fword Geneura Gradaffo himſelf horfe horſe king knight laft laſt loft maid Merlin mind moſt muſt ne'er o'er ORLANDO FURIOSO Orlando Innamorato Otho paffage paffed paffion Petrarch poem poet poffeffion praiſe prifoner publiſhed purfu'd purpoſe purſue rife Rinaldo Rodomont Rogero romance Sacripant ſeems ſhall ſhe ſhield ſhould ſkies ſpeed Spenfer ſpirit ſpread ſtate ſteed ſteps ſtill ſtood ſtory ſtrange Taffo thefe theſe thofe thoſe thou thouſand tranflation uſe view'd warrior whofe whoſe
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lxi ページ - Works of imagination excel by their allurement and delight ; by their power of attracting and detaining the attention. That book is good in vain, which the reader throws away. He only is the master, who keeps the mind in pleasing captivity...
xxxvii ページ - ... and the like, to the Echidna, to the Circe, to the Medea, to the Achilles, to the Syrens, to the Harpies, to the Phryxus, and the Bellerophon, of the ancients ? The cave of Polypheme might...
208 ページ - Of Camball, and of Algarfife, And who had Canace to wife, That own'd the virtuous ring and glafs, And of the wondrous horfe of brafs, On which the Tartar king did ride...
xxxvii ページ - Andromeda might give occafion for ftories of diftrefled damfels on the point of being devoured by dragons, and delivered at fuch a critical feafon by their favourite knights. Some faint traditions of the ancients might have been kept glimmering and alive during the whole barbarous ages, as they are called ', and it is not impofilble, but thefe have been the parents of the Genii in the eaftern, and the B 2 Fairies Fairies in the weftern world.
lxxxii ページ - Ariosto, the chief of the banditti addressed him with intrepid gallantry, and told him, that since he was the author of the Orlando Furioso...
59 ページ - Or daunt unequall armies of his foes, Or when the flying heavens he would affray: For so exceeding shone his glistring ray, That Phoebus...
iv ページ - He was the first to grant them quarter. The battle won, of Roland's soul Each milder virtue took possession ; To vanquish'd foes he o'er a bowl His heart surrender'd at discretion.
35 ページ - A multitude with fpades and axes arm'd To lay hills plain, fell woods, or valleys fill, Or where plain was raife hill, or overlay With bridges rivers proud, as with a yoke ; Mules after thefe, camels and dromedaries, 335 And waggons fraught with utenfils of war.
l ページ - ... his narration. He charms by the force and clearness of his expression, by the readiness and variety of his inventions, and by his natural pictures of the passions, especially those of the gay and amorous kind : And however his faults may diminish our satisfaction, they are not able entirely to destroy it.
78 ページ - Merlin mewed to her in a roche [rock] whereas was a great wonder, and wrought by enchauntment, which went under a ftone, fo by her fubtile craft and working Ihe made Merlin to go under that ftone, to let him wit of the marvailes there.