| Homerus - 1720 - 382 pages
...would be endlefs to produce inftances of thefe kinds. The characters of Virgil are far from ftriking us in this open manner; they lie in a great degree hidden and undiftinguiflh'd, and where they are mark'd molt evidently, affe<S us not in proportion to thofe of... | |
| Alexander Pope - 1751 - 372 pages
...would be endlefs to produce inftances of thefe kinds. The characters of Virgil are far from ftriking us in this open manner ; they lie in a great degree hidden and undiftingtiifhed, and where th^y are marked moft evidently, affecSfc us not in proportion to thofe... | |
| Alexander Pope - 1752 - 438 pages
...would be endlefs to produce instances of thefe kinds. The characters of Virgil are far from ftriking us in this open manner ; they lie in a great degree hidden and undiflinguimed, and where they are marked moft evidently, affedl us not in proportion to thofe of Homer.... | |
| Alexander Pope - English literature - 1757 - 344 pages
...would be endlefs to produce inftances of thefe kinds. The charafters of Virgil are far from linking us in this open manner ; they lie in a great degree hidden and undiftinguifhed, and, where they are marked moft evidently, affeft us not in proportion to thofe of... | |
| Alexander Pope - English poetry - 1760 - 436 pages
...would be endlefs to produce inftances of thefe kinds. The characters of Virgil are fa? from ftriking us in this open manner; they lie in a great degree hidden and undiftinguifhed, and where they are marked. moft evidently affect us not in proportion to thofe of... | |
| Virgil - 1763 - 374 pages
...eminently different from the other. " The charafters of Virgil (lays Mr. Pope) " are far from ftriking us " in this open manner ; they lie in a great " degree hidden and undiftinguifhed, and " where they are marked moft evidently, af" feel us not in proportion to thofe... | |
| Virgil, Christopher Pitt, Joseph Warton - Latin poetry - 1763 - 382 pages
...eminently different from the other. " The characters of Virgil (fays Mr. Pope) " are far from ftriking us " in this open manner ; they lie in a great " degree hidden and undiftinguifhed, and " where they are marked moft evidently, af" fe& us not in proportion to thofe... | |
| Samuel Johnson - English poetry - 1779 - 396 pages
...would be endlefs to produce inftances of thefe kinds. The charafters of Virgil are far from ftriking us in this open manner ; they lie in a great degree hidden and undiftinguifhed, and where they are marked moft evidently, affeft us not in proportion to thofe of... | |
| Alexander Pope - 1787 - 338 pages
...would be endlefs to produce inftances of thefe kinds. The characters of Virgil are far from ftriking us in this open manner; they lie in a great degree hidden and undiftinguiftied, and where they are marked moft evidently, affeCt us not in proportion to thofe of... | |
| Vicesimus Knox - English prose literature - 1790 - 1058 pages
...be endlefs to produce inftances of thefe kinds. — The characters of Virgil are far from ftriking us in this open manner ; they lie in a great degree hidden and undiilinguifhed, and where they are marked moil evidently, affeft us not in proportion to thofe of... | |
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