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" Homer makes us hearers, and Virgil leaves us readers. If in the next place we take a view of the sentiments, the same presiding faculty is eminent in the sublimity and spirit of his thoughts. Longinus has given his opinion, that it was in this part Homer... "
The Works of Alexander Pope: Miscellaneous pieces in verse and prose - Page 290
by Alexander Pope - 1751
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The Poetical Works of Alexander Pope, Esq: To which is Prefixed the Life of ...

Alexander Pope - 1850 - 510 pages
...; all which are the effects of a colder invention, that interests us less in the action described : Homer makes us hearers, and Virgil leaves us readers. If in the next place we take a view of the sentiments, the same presiding faculty is eminent in the sublimity and spirit of his thoughts. Longinus...
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Translation of the Iliad of Homer

Homer, Alexander Pope - 1851 - 562 pages
...sentiments, the same presiding faculty is eminent in the sublimity and spirit of his thoughts. Longinus bos given his opinion, that it was in this part Homer principally excelled. What were alone sufficient to prove the grandeur and excellence of his sentiments in general, is, that they have so...
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The Poetical Works of Alexander Pope

Alexander Pope - 1859 - 504 pages
...all which are the effeets of a colder invention, that i interests us less in the aetion deseribed : `Kz, sentiments, the same presiding faculty is eminent in the sublimity and spirit of his thoughts. Longinus...
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The Iliad, tr. by Pope

Homerus - 1870 - 552 pages
...: all which are the effects of a colder invention, that interests us less in the action described : Homer makes us hearers, and Virgil leaves us readers. If, in the next place, we take a view of the sentiments, the same presiding faculty is eminent in the sublimity and spirit of his thoughts. Longinus...
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The Iliad, tr. by A. Pope, with notes by T.A. Buckley

Homerus - 1874 - 494 pages
...; all which are the effects of a colder invention, that interests us less in the action described : Homer makes us hearers, and Virgil leaves us readers. If, in the next place, we take a view of the sentiments, the same presiding faculty is eminent in the sublimity and spirit of his thoughts. Longinus...
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Homer's Iliad

Homer - 1877 - 558 pages
...Homer: all which arc the effects of a colder invention, that interests us less in the action described: Homer makes us hearers, and Virgil leaves us readers. If, in the next place, we take a view of the sentiments, the same presiding tocuUy is eminent in the sublimity and spirit of his thoughts. Longinus...
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The Iliad of Homer

Homer - 1884 - 500 pages
...that interests us less in the action described : Homer makes us hearers, and Virgil leaves us readers. his thoughts. Longinus has given his opinion, that...this part Homer principally excelled. What were alone sufficient to prove the grandeur and excellence of his sentiments in general, is, that they have so...
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The Complete Poetical Works of Alexander Pope

Alexander Pope - 1903 - 704 pages
...: all which are the effects of a colder invention, that interests us less in the action described : Homer makes us hearers, and Virgil leaves us readers. If in the next place we take a view of the Sentiments, the same presiding faculty is eminent in the sublimity and spirit of his thoughts. Longinus...
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The Iliad of Homer

Homer - 1909 - 630 pages
...: all which are the eflects of a colder invention, that interests us less in the action described : Homer makes us hearers, and Virgil leaves us readers. If in the next place we take a view of the sentiments, the same presiding faculty is eminent in the sublimity and spirit of his thoughts. Lpnginus...
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Critical Essays of the Eighteenth Century, 1700-1725

Willard Higley Durham - 1915 - 502 pages
...Homer: All which are the Effects of a colder Invention, that interests us less in the Action describ'd: Homer makes us Hearers, and Virgil leaves us Readers. If in the next place we take a View of the Sentiments, the same presiding Faculty is eminent in the Sublimity and Spirit of his Thoughts. Longinus...
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