Alexander Pope, Volume 41 |
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Page 54
... reader of a modern age could respond . This method Pope chose for his trans- lation of the Iliad . That Pope was aware that certain qualities of the Iliad were translatable and others were not is apparent in his Preface . He begins with ...
... reader of a modern age could respond . This method Pope chose for his trans- lation of the Iliad . That Pope was aware that certain qualities of the Iliad were translatable and others were not is apparent in his Preface . He begins with ...
Page 59
... reader's experience : " pour , " " cloud , " " tumult , " " skies , " " tempests , " " swell . . . tide . " At the same time , the couplet organization of the passage detaches the reader from the action and allows him to look upon the ...
... reader's experience : " pour , " " cloud , " " tumult , " " skies , " " tempests , " " swell . . . tide . " At the same time , the couplet organization of the passage detaches the reader from the action and allows him to look upon the ...
Page 92
... reader unmoved or complacent , despite the reader's agreement or disagreement with Pope's treatment of pride in the rational argu- ment . The same thing could be said about Pope's plea for the abstract principle of discordia concors ...
... reader unmoved or complacent , despite the reader's agreement or disagreement with Pope's treatment of pride in the rational argu- ment . The same thing could be said about Pope's plea for the abstract principle of discordia concors ...
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action Addison Alexander Pope allusion appeared Arbuthnot attack attempts Bathurst Beauty becomes Book cause character Christian concerned continue couplet created Criticism discussion divine Dunciad early edition English epic Epistle Essay Ethic evil expressed fact fall final force four George gives Homer Horace human ideas Iliad illustrate Imitations John kind language later Laws learned letter lines literary live Lord Lost man's March mean metaphor mind moral nature original pastoral poem poet poetic poetry political Pope Pope's portrait praise present Press pride principle Professor publication published reader reason relation rhetoric rules satire seems sense sketch social society success taste theme things tion tone tradition translation true truth turn University values verse vice virtue whole Windsor Forest writing written