Alexander Pope, Volume 41 |
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Page 22
... final twenty - four lines extend the vision of the Golden Age into the future , even to the Millennium , as the final alexandrine of the poem states , " Thy Realm for ever lasts ! thy own Messiah reigns ! " The rhetoric is controlled at ...
... final twenty - four lines extend the vision of the Golden Age into the future , even to the Millennium , as the final alexandrine of the poem states , " Thy Realm for ever lasts ! thy own Messiah reigns ! " The rhetoric is controlled at ...
Page 66
... final two volumes in 1720. The subscription paid Pope so handsomely that his financial future was secure . Pope is often with good cause referred to as the shrewdest businessman among English poets . Doubtless the financial success of ...
... final two volumes in 1720. The subscription paid Pope so handsomely that his financial future was secure . Pope is often with good cause referred to as the shrewdest businessman among English poets . Doubtless the financial success of ...
Page 140
... final " Dialogue II " with its tribute " Why rail they then , if but a Wreath of Mine / Oh All - accomplish'd St. John ! deck thy Shrine ? ” ( 1.138-39 ) . The original epistle of Horace to Maecenas avowed Horace's intention to study ...
... final " Dialogue II " with its tribute " Why rail they then , if but a Wreath of Mine / Oh All - accomplish'd St. John ! deck thy Shrine ? ” ( 1.138-39 ) . The original epistle of Horace to Maecenas avowed Horace's intention to study ...
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