Pleasures, Objects and Advantages of LiteratureRoutledge, 1866 - 171 pages |
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admiration allegory amusement Ariosto beauty Ben Jonson Biography bloom Boccaccio called character charm cloud colour comedy Constantinople Criticism Dante dark delight Demosthenes divine Divine Comedy Dryden Dunciad enjoy entertainment Faery Queen fame familiar fancy feeling Fiction flower fruit garden Genius glimmer glory gold grace Greek hand heart historian Homer Horace humour Iliad imagination Johnson landscape learning light literature live Livy look lustre magnificent Malebranche ment Milton mind moral never night numbers painted painter Paradise Paradise Lost pencil Petrarch philosopher picture Pindar Plato pleasure Plutarch poem poet poetical Poetry Polybius Pope portrait prose racter Raffaelle reader recollections Romance rose scene scholar sentiment sermon shade shadow Shakspere solemn soul Southey Spenser splendour stanza story summer sweet Tacitus Tasso Taste tears thou thought Thucydides Tintoretto tion Titian trees truth verse Virgil walk Warton writing youth