The Tutorial History of English LiteratureUniversity Tutorial Press, 1954 - 294 sidor |
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Sida 69
... means , and so they fetched unnatural horrors , as we see in Webster and later in Ford . And playgoers , having once felt abnormal stimulus , craved like inebriates for more and more . Finally , the moral standard sank . Society was ...
... means , and so they fetched unnatural horrors , as we see in Webster and later in Ford . And playgoers , having once felt abnormal stimulus , craved like inebriates for more and more . Finally , the moral standard sank . Society was ...
Sida 138
... means of Crusoe's return to the world never attains to the dignity of a plot ) , any excitation of curiosity by means of the never - failing interest of love , any power of characterisation , any analysis of passion or motive , any real ...
... means of Crusoe's return to the world never attains to the dignity of a plot ) , any excitation of curiosity by means of the never - failing interest of love , any power of characterisation , any analysis of passion or motive , any real ...
Sida 216
... means , I doubt not , of setting you at freedom . Mean- time , do as you see me do ; clap your hand thus on the weasand of this high and mighty prince , under his ruff , and if he offer to strug- gle or cry out , fail not , my worthy ...
... means , I doubt not , of setting you at freedom . Mean- time , do as you see me do ; clap your hand thus on the weasand of this high and mighty prince , under his ruff , and if he offer to strug- gle or cry out , fail not , my worthy ...
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Addison allegory Ballads beauty Beowulf blank verse called Canterbury Tales character characteristic Chaucer Classic Coleridge comedy contemporary couplet criticism death Defoe Dickens drama Dryden eighteenth century Elizabethan England English literature English poetry Epicene Essay expression eyes Faery Faery Queen Faustus feeling fiction genius give Gorboduc greatest hand heart heaven heroic couplets humour imitation influence Johnson king Kipling language later lines literary live Lord lyric Lyrical Ballads Marlowe Matthew Arnold metre Milton moral mother nature never night novel Paradise Lost passage passion perfect period plays poem poet poetic Pope Pope's prose reader Romantic Romantic poetry Rudyard Kipling satire says scene sense Shakespeare Shelley song sonnet soul Spenser spirit stanza story style Tamburlaine Tennyson thee things thou thought tragedy truth versification Wee Willie Winkie Welcum whole wonderful words Wordsworth writing wrote Wyatt