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" By these, therefore, examples and reasons, I think it may be manifest, that the poet, with that same hand of delight, doth draw the mind more effectually than any other art doth. "
The New-York Literary Gazette, and Phi Beta Kappa Repository - Page 120
1826
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The Defence of Poesie: A Letter to Q. Elizabeth; A Defence of Leicester

Philip Sidney - England - 1908 - 304 pages
...heavenly Psalme of mercie well testifieth. By these therefore examples and reasons, I thinke it may be manifest, that the Poet with that same hand of delight, doth draw the mind more effectually then any other Art doth. And so a conclusion not unfitly ensue, that as vertue is the most excellent...
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A Defence of Poesie and Poems

Philip Sidney - Poetry - 1909 - 204 pages
...heavenly psalm of mercy well testifieth. By these, therefore, examples and reasons, I think it may be manifest that the poet, with that same hand of delight,...excellent resting-place for all worldly learning to make his end of, so poetry, being the most familiar to teach it, and most princely to move towards it, in...
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English Essays: From Sir Philip Sidney to Macaulay

Charles W - English essays - 1910 - 466 pages
...heavenly Psalm of Mercy well testifieth. By these, therefore, examples and reasons', I think it may be manifest that the poet, with that same hand of delight,...any other art doth. And so a conclusion not unfitly ensueth : that as virtue is the most excellent resting-place for all worldly learning to make his end...
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ENGLISH ESSAYS

SIR PHILIP SIDNEY TO MACAULAY - 1910 - 474 pages
...instrumental cause) as in a glass to see his own filthiness, as that heavenly Psalm of Mercy well testifieth. doth draw the mind more effectually than any other art doth. And so a conclusion not unfitly ensueth: that as virtue is the most excellent resting-place for all worldly learning to make his end...
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English Essays from Sir Philip Sidney to Macaulay: With Introductions, Notes ...

Charles William Eliot - English essays - 1910 - 440 pages
...doth draw the mind more effectually than any other art doth. And so a conclusion not unfitly ensueth : that as virtue is the most excellent resting-place for all worldly learning to make his end of, so poetry, being the most familiar to teach it, and most princely to move towards it, in...
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Elizabethan Criticism of Poetry

Guy Andrew Thompson - Criticism - 1914 - 230 pages
...experience — "to move the feigned may be turned to the highest key of passion. '' The poet with the " hand of delight doth draw the mind more effectually than any other art doth."16 Sidney considers it more fundamentally essential that poetry should please or move than that...
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English Critical Essays (sixteenth, Seventeenth, and Eighteenth Centuries ...

Edmund David Jones - Criticism - 1922 - 522 pages
...heavenly Psalm of Mercy well testifieth. L By these, therefore, examples and reasons, I think it may be manifest that the Poet, with that same hand of delight,...any other art doth : and so a conclusion not unfitly ensueth, that, as Virtue is the most excellent resting place for all worldly learning to make his end...
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The defence of poesie. Political discourses. Correspondence. Translations

Philip Sidney - 1923 - 466 pages
...heavenly Psalme of mercie well testifieth. By these therefore examples and reasons, I thinke it may be manifest, that the Poet with that same hand of delight, doth draw the mind more effectually then any other Art doth. And so a conclusion not unfitly ensue, that as vertue is the most excellet...
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Elizabethan Verse and Prose (non-dramatic)

George Reuben Potter - English literature - 1928 - 640 pages
...heavenly Psalm of Mercy well testifieth. By these, therefore, examples and reasons, I think it may be manifest that the poet, with that same hand of delight,...any other art doth. And so a conclusion not unfitly ensueth: that as virtue is the most excellent resting-place for all worldly learning to make his end...
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The Criticism of Literature

Elizabeth Nitchie - Literary Criticism - 1928 - 422 pages
.... . with this end, to teach and delight." "I think it may be manifest," he says in another passage, "that the Poet, with that same hand of delight, doth...any other art doth: and so a conclusion not unfitly ensueth, that, as Virtue is the most excellent resting place for all worldly learning to make his end...
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