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" dextrdque " ' sinistrdque" and say, not only Satan's spear is " compared to an ' admiral's mast,' but ' his " ' shield to the moon seen through a telescope!" " My dear Sir, consider a little. You forget " the passage ; or have purposely left out more... "
A Reply to an Unsentimental Sort of Critic: The Reviewer of Spence's ... - Page 22
by William Lisle Bowles - 1820 - 43 pages
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Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 5

1819 - 792 pages
...triumphantly say, ' Milton is full of imagery derived from art ! !* You come on, ' dcxtraque siniitraquc,' and say, not only Satan's spear is compared to an * admiral's mast,' but ' hit shield to Ute moon seen through a telescope !' " My dear Sir, consider a little. You forget the...
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A Reply to an "Unsentimental Sort of Critic,": The Reviewer of "Spence's ...

William Lisle Bowles - 1820 - 52 pages
...TALLEST PINE " ' HEWN ON NORWEGIAN HILLS to be the mast " ' Of some great admiral, were but a wand ! r* " You leave out the chief, I might say the only, " circumstance,...dear Sir, consider a little. You forget " the passage j or have purposely left out more " than half of its essential poetical beauty. What " reason have...
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Letters to Lord Byron on a Question of Poetical Criticism: With Corrections ...

William Lisle Bowles - 1822 - 260 pages
...say, " MILTON is full of imagery " derived "from art!!" You then advance, " dextrdque " sinislrcique," and say, not only Satan's spear is compared to an...his shield " to the moon seen through a telescope!" " His pond'rous shield " Hung on his shoulders like the moon, whose orb " Through optic glass the Tuscan...
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The Pamphleteer, Volume 20

1822 - 580 pages
...triumphantly say, " MILTON is full of imagery derived from art!!" You then advance, " dextraque sinistraque," and say, not only Satan's spear is compared to an "admiral's mast," but " AM shield to the moon seen through a telescope!" My dear Sir, consider a little. You forget the passage;...
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The Works of Lord Byron, Volume 12

George Gordon Byron Baron Byron - 1901 - 664 pages
...triumphantly say, ' MILTON is full of imagery derived from art ! ! ' You then advance, ' dextr&que sinistrdque,' and say, not only Satan's spear is compared...' his shield to the moon seen through a telescope I ' "My dear Sir, consider a little. You forget the passage; or have purposely left out more than half...
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The Works of Lord Byron, Volume 12

George Gordon Byron Baron Byron - 1904 - 656 pages
...say, ' MILTON is full of imagery derived from art! I* You then advance, ' dextraque sinistrtiqne,' and say, not only Satan's spear is compared to an 'admiral's mast,' but 'hil shield to the moon seen through a telescope! ' " My dear Sir, consider a little. You forget the...
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The Invariable Principles of Poetry

William Lisle Bowles - 1819 - 240 pages
...triumphantly say, " MILTON is full of imagery " derived from art ! !" You come on, "dextraque " sinislraque" and say, not only Satan's spear is compared to an " admiral's mast," but " his 41 shield to the moon seen through a telescope!" My dear Sir, consider a little. You forget the passage...
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