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But then, sir, as one excellently sayes in his Defence of Poesie, This is a kind of Poetry which belongs 〈 ◊ 〉 those who lye in prose as wel as those who fain in Verse. For Plin• … when he speaks of men with one foot, whose breadth interposed between them and the sun, shades their whole body, to be as great a poet as Ovid, when he speaks of a Virgin transformed into a Laurell, so, Sir, |
But then, sir, as one excellently Says in his Defence of Poesy, This is a kind of Poetry which belongs 〈 ◊ 〉 those who lie in prose as well as those who fain in Verse. For Plin• … when he speaks of men with one foot, whose breadth interposed between them and the sun, shades their Whole body, to be as great a poet as Ovid, when he speaks of a Virgae transformed into a Laurel, so, Sir, |
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