Lectures on English Literature, from Chaucer to Tennyson |
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Sida xi
... Edward the ThirdContinental wars - Petrarch - Boccacio - Froissart - The
church - Wyclif - Arts and Architecture - Statutes in English - Chaucer resumed –
His humour and pathos - Sense of natural beauty - The Temple of Fame -
Chaucer and ...
... Edward the ThirdContinental wars - Petrarch - Boccacio - Froissart - The
church - Wyclif - Arts and Architecture - Statutes in English - Chaucer resumed –
His humour and pathos - Sense of natural beauty - The Temple of Fame -
Chaucer and ...
Sida xii
Page 184 LECTURE VII . LITERATURE OF THE SEVENTEENTI AND
EIGHTEENTH CENTURIES . Milton ' s old age - Donne ' s Sermons — No great
school of poetry without love of nature - Blank in this respect between Paradise
Lost and ...
Page 184 LECTURE VII . LITERATURE OF THE SEVENTEENTI AND
EIGHTEENTH CENTURIES . Milton ' s old age - Donne ' s Sermons — No great
school of poetry without love of nature - Blank in this respect between Paradise
Lost and ...
Sida xiii
... of nature — His antagonism to Divine truth , The Dream , the most faultless of
his poems - Don Juan - Shelley - Leigh Hunt ' s remarks on - Carlyle - His
earnestness - SoutheyHis historical works — Thalaba - Wordsworth - His
characteristics ...
... of nature — His antagonism to Divine truth , The Dream , the most faultless of
his poems - Don Juan - Shelley - Leigh Hunt ' s remarks on - Carlyle - His
earnestness - SoutheyHis historical works — Thalaba - Wordsworth - His
characteristics ...
Sida 24
The silent Sea no glad response returning , We cry , “ O Sun ! that lightest nature '
s face , Dost thou not shine upon some favour ' d place Where he is tost for whom
our souls are yearning ? ” No answering voice allays our trembling fears , And ...
The silent Sea no glad response returning , We cry , “ O Sun ! that lightest nature '
s face , Dost thou not shine upon some favour ' d place Where he is tost for whom
our souls are yearning ? ” No answering voice allays our trembling fears , And ...
Sida 29
forth from day to day , and from year to year ; and when these vast stores are
seen to have been made part of the scholarship of men and become a portion of
their intellectual and moral nature , one is appalled at the first approach , and
may ...
forth from day to day , and from year to year ; and when these vast stores are
seen to have been made part of the scholarship of men and become a portion of
their intellectual and moral nature , one is appalled at the first approach , and
may ...
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Lectures on English Literature: From Chaucer to Tennyson Henry Reed Obegränsad förhandsgranskning - 1855 |
Lectures on English Literature: From Chaucer to Tennyson Henry Reed Obegränsad förhandsgranskning - 1855 |
LECTURES ON ENGLISH LITERATURE, FROM CHAURER TO TENNYSON HENRY REED Obegränsad förhandsgranskning - 1855 |
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