Lectures on English Literature: From Chaucer to TennysonParry & McMillan, 1855 - 387 sidor |
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Sida xx
... earliest and latest hours of European sojourn were passed under the roof of the great Poet whose memory he most revered , and whose writings had interwoven themselves with his intellectual and moral being . " I do not know , " he said ...
... earliest and latest hours of European sojourn were passed under the roof of the great Poet whose memory he most revered , and whose writings had interwoven themselves with his intellectual and moral being . " I do not know , " he said ...
Sida 23
... early death - for he was but forty - six years of age -all these hopes were doomed to disappointment . The most that can now be done is to give to the world these fragmentary memorials of his studious life ; and for them I beg an ...
... early death - for he was but forty - six years of age -all these hopes were doomed to disappointment . The most that can now be done is to give to the world these fragmentary memorials of his studious life ; and for them I beg an ...
Sida 26
... earliest stirred - how senti- ments of admiration and of love had their first motion in our souls toward the souls of the great poets . We may perhaps remember , too , how the chastening influence of wise and genial criticism may have ...
... earliest stirred - how senti- ments of admiration and of love had their first motion in our souls toward the souls of the great poets . We may perhaps remember , too , how the chastening influence of wise and genial criticism may have ...
Sida 33
... early innocence and yearnings for eternity , that Wordsworth struck his lofty lyric , the most sublime ode in this and , perhaps , any language , on the birth - the life - the undying destiny of the soul of man . I have dwelt upon this ...
... early innocence and yearnings for eternity , that Wordsworth struck his lofty lyric , the most sublime ode in this and , perhaps , any language , on the birth - the life - the undying destiny of the soul of man . I have dwelt upon this ...
Sida 59
... early part of it , he will find his judg- ment enlarged by seeing how those generations dealt with this same branch of letters . Travelling back a century earlier , let him take the single volume of Lord Bacon's Essays , in which ...
... early part of it , he will find his judg- ment enlarged by seeing how those generations dealt with this same branch of letters . Travelling back a century earlier , let him take the single volume of Lord Bacon's Essays , in which ...
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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 |
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admirable beauty Byron century character Charles Lamb Chaucer Christian Cowper dark death deep discipline divine duty earnest earth England English language English literature English poetry expression faculties Faery Queen familiar French Revolution genial genius gentle give glory guage habit happy hath heart honour Horace Walpole human imagination influence intellectual Jeremy Taylor Lady language lecture letters light litera literary living look Lord Lord Byron Lord Chatham memory Milton mind moral nation nature never Paradise Lost pass passage passion philosophy poem poet poet's poetic racter reading remarkable sacred Saxon Scott sense Shakspeare song sorrow soul sound Southey Southey's speak speech Spenser spirit stanzas style sympathy Tenterden thing thou thought and feeling tion true truth uncon utterance verse wisdom wise wit and humour womanly words Wordsworth writings