Pope and Bolingbroke: A Study of Friendship and Influence |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 35
Page 8
... relationship though they cannot be resolved entirely factually . Was Pope a Jacobite ? How politically commit- ted was he ? What mutual interests welded the relationship ? Were they compatible in their views of religion ? The opening ...
... relationship though they cannot be resolved entirely factually . Was Pope a Jacobite ? How politically commit- ted was he ? What mutual interests welded the relationship ? Were they compatible in their views of religion ? The opening ...
Page 67
... relationship with Wal- pole , " the Prompter , " and the Queen . He is presented as a tool - villain , part victim and part cause of the evil nexus in which all three are con- nected . About his capacity to cause real damage , Pope ...
... relationship with Wal- pole , " the Prompter , " and the Queen . He is presented as a tool - villain , part victim and part cause of the evil nexus in which all three are con- nected . About his capacity to cause real damage , Pope ...
Page 110
... relationship between the poet and the addressee genuinely interrogated by the poem ; this poem alone can be said to be about its dedicatee . There is a sense here , not present in the others , of the poem making its mind up about its ...
... relationship between the poet and the addressee genuinely interrogated by the poem ; this poem alone can be said to be about its dedicatee . There is a sense here , not present in the others , of the poem making its mind up about its ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
activity Alexander Pope allusion appear argues argument attack attempt authority became become believe Boling Bolingbroke broke called cause certainly chapter claim close common concern constitution Corr corruption court Craftsman critics Dawley early edition England Epistle Essay evidence example existed expressed Fragments France friendship garden give human ideas Imit important influence interest Jacobite John kind King later letter lines literary lived Lord major March means mind moral nature opposition original party passage Patriot perhaps period philosophical poem poet political Pope's possible present principles published reader reason recent reference regarded relationship religion respect satire seems sense social society spirit suggest Swift theory thought tion Tory translation turn verse virtue Walpole Warburton Whigs writing written