| Philip Sidney - 1724 - 270 pages
...times he ruuft tell events, whereof he can yield nocaufe, or if he do, it muft be poetically. For, that a feigned example hath as much force to teach,...key of paffion: let us take one example wherein an Hijiorian and a Toet did concur. Herodotus and Juftint do .both teftify, That Zopyrus, King 2)arius's... | |
| English literature - 1831 - 368 pages
...times he must tell events whereof he can yield no cause ; or if he do, it must be poetically. For, that a feigned example hath as much force to teach...a true example, (for as for to move, it is clear, since the feigned may be tuned to the highest key of passion,) let us take one example wherein an historian... | |
| Philip Sidney - 1860 - 404 pages
...Many times he must tell events whereof he can yield no cause; or if he do, it must be poetically. For, that a feigned example hath as much force to teach...a true example, (for as for to move, it is clear, since the feigned may be tuned to the highest key of passion,) let us take one example wherein an historian... | |
| Cassell, ltd - 1876 - 466 pages
...times he must tell events whereof he can yield no cause ; or if he do, it must be poetically. For, hether he had any other thing to say that grieved...his conscience, which, sore abashed, answered no wor since the feigned may be tuned to the highest key of passion), let us take one example wherein an historian... | |
| Philip Sidney - Poetry - 1889 - 238 pages
...whereof he can yeeld no || cause: or if he do, njcht gez. it must be poetically. For that a fained example hath as much force to teach, as a true example (for as for to mooue, it is cleare, since5 the fained may be tuned to the highest key of passion) let vs take one... | |
| Philip Sidney - Poetry - 1890 - 210 pages
...times he must tell events whereof he can yield no cause ; or if he do, it must be poetically. For, that a feigned example hath as much force to teach...true example — for as for to move, it is clear, 10 since the feigned may be tuned to the highest key of passion — let us take one example wherein... | |
| Charles Edwyn Vaughan - Criticism - 1896 - 330 pages
...Many times he must tell events, whereof he can yield no cause: or if he do, it must be poetical; for that a feigned example hath as much force to teach,...as a true example (for as for to move, it is clear, sith the feigned may be tuned to the highest key of passion), let us take one example, wherein a poet... | |
| Oliver Herbrand Gordon Leigh - English literature - 1901 - 432 pages
...Many times he must tell events whereof he can yield no cause; or if he do, it must be poetically. For, that a feigned example hath as much force to teach...as a true example (for as for to move, it is clear, since the feigned may be tuned to the highest key of passion), let us take one example wherein an historian... | |
| Literature - 1901 - 440 pages
...times he must tell events whereof he can yield no cause ; or if he do, it must be poetically. For, that a feigned example hath as much force to teach...as a true example (for as for to move, it is clear, since the feigned may be tuned to the highest key of passion), let us take one example wherein an historian... | |
| English literature - 1901 - 436 pages
...times he must tell events whereof he can yield no cause ; or if he do, it must be poetically. For, that a feigned example hath as much force to teach...as a true example (for as for to move, it is clear, since the feigned may be tuned to the highest key of passion), let us take one example wherein an historian... | |
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