ELH., Volume 11Johns Hopkins University Press, 1944 ELH publishes studies that interpret the conditions affecting major works in English and American literature. The journal seeks to emphasize the importance of historical continuity in the discipline of letters without sponsoring particular methods or aims. |
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Page 58
... imitation of native satire is his extensive use of the formal curse . Because of its connection with the school of Cleveland and with Cleveland himself ( whom Oldham did not consider a sufficiently exalted source for acknowledgment ) ...
... imitation of native satire is his extensive use of the formal curse . Because of its connection with the school of Cleveland and with Cleveland himself ( whom Oldham did not consider a sufficiently exalted source for acknowledgment ) ...
Page 196
... imitations of Juvenal himself , he deplored " the servility of imitation , only to copy that of which the writer , if he was to live now , would often be ashamed ( Rambler 29 ) . From this almost extreme denunciation of imitation there ...
... imitations of Juvenal himself , he deplored " the servility of imitation , only to copy that of which the writer , if he was to live now , would often be ashamed ( Rambler 29 ) . From this almost extreme denunciation of imitation there ...
Page 264
... imitation . The other passages in Tamburlaine are also less conclusive evidence than the almond - tree ( as Mr. Baldwin him- self recognizes in some instances ) ; to the extent that close parallelism justifies use of " imitation ...
... imitation . The other passages in Tamburlaine are also less conclusive evidence than the almond - tree ( as Mr. Baldwin him- self recognizes in some instances ) ; to the extent that close parallelism justifies use of " imitation ...
Contents
JUL | 12 |
WILLIAMS WELDON M The Influence of Ben Jonsons | 38 |
MOTTER T H VAIL Garrick and the Private Theatres | 63 |
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actor Anthony Munday appears Axiochus Barnam Ben Jonson borrowed Browning Buenos Aires Burby Byron Canynge Catiline character Charles Chatterton classical comedy critics Cupid and Psyche Dana Dekker Desdemona Don Juan Donne Donne's drama Earl edition eighteenth century Elizabethan England English Essays evidence Faerie Queene friends Garrick ghost Hayward Herman Melville Heywood History honor Iago Ibid imitation influence Jesuits John Johnson Juvenal Keats lady letter lines literary literature London Lord Love's Mistress lyric Marlowe Marlowe's MartÃn Fierro medieval melancholy Melville Melville's Munday nature neo-classic Oldham's Othello Oxford passage play PMLA poem poet poet's poetic poetry praise prolog Review Revista romantic Romeo Rowley satire Satyr says scene Shakespeare Shelley Speech Spenser stanza Tamburlaine Theatre theme Thomas Thomas Chatterton thought tion Townley University Press verse Warton William William Canynge Wordsworth writing written wrote York