The Eclectic Magazine of Foreign Literature, Science, and Art, Volume 25Leavitt, Trow, & Company, 1851 - American literature |
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Results 1-5 of 64
Page 3
... poem of Ovidius Naso , written in the Getick language ; found wrapt up in wax , at Sabaria , on the frontiers of Hungary , where there remains a tradition that he died in his return towards Rome from Tomos , either after his pardon or ...
... poem of Ovidius Naso , written in the Getick language ; found wrapt up in wax , at Sabaria , on the frontiers of Hungary , where there remains a tradition that he died in his return towards Rome from Tomos , either after his pardon or ...
Page 19
... poem is rather a transfu- sion of Juvenalian vis vitæ into modern veins ; such a satire as the old Roman him- self would have written had he been a sub- ject of his most sacred majesty the second George . W. Why , child , you've ...
... poem is rather a transfu- sion of Juvenalian vis vitæ into modern veins ; such a satire as the old Roman him- self would have written had he been a sub- ject of his most sacred majesty the second George . W. Why , child , you've ...
Page 53
... poems he has done ample justice to the great hero of Poland ; and , indeed , there are few instances where unsuccessful valor has received such homage from poetic genius , as Byron , Campbell , and other poets of our age and nation have ...
... poems he has done ample justice to the great hero of Poland ; and , indeed , there are few instances where unsuccessful valor has received such homage from poetic genius , as Byron , Campbell , and other poets of our age and nation have ...
Page 60
... poems , but in modern times we do not think there has appeared any dramatic composition which can be pronounced superior to the master- piece of Henry Taylor . Neither of the Sardanapalus of Lord Byron , nor the Remorse of Coleridge ...
... poems , but in modern times we do not think there has appeared any dramatic composition which can be pronounced superior to the master- piece of Henry Taylor . Neither of the Sardanapalus of Lord Byron , nor the Remorse of Coleridge ...
Page 65
... poem in rhyme , called " The Lay of Elena . " This introduces us to the lady who is to be the heroine of the second part of the drama . All the information it gives might , we think , have been better conveyed in a few lines of blank ...
... poem in rhyme , called " The Lay of Elena . " This introduces us to the lady who is to be the heroine of the second part of the drama . All the information it gives might , we think , have been better conveyed in a few lines of blank ...
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