Lectures on English Literature, from Chaucer to Tennyson |
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Sida 43
W what is wanting on the one side finds its complement on the other , for , Heart
with heart and mind with mind , When the main fibres are entwined , - Through
Nature ' s skill , May even by contraries be joined More closely still . * Such was
the ...
W what is wanting on the one side finds its complement on the other , for , Heart
with heart and mind with mind , When the main fibres are entwined , - Through
Nature ' s skill , May even by contraries be joined More closely still . * Such was
the ...
Sida 49
It is in letters as in life , and there ( as has been well said ) the woman who
praises and blames , persuades and resists , warns or exhorts upon occasion
given , and carries her love through all with a strong heart , and not a weak
fondness ...
It is in letters as in life , and there ( as has been well said ) the woman who
praises and blames , persuades and resists , warns or exhorts upon occasion
given , and carries her love through all with a strong heart , and not a weak
fondness ...
Sida 52
Can dull Indifference or Hate ' s troubled gaze See through the secret heart ' s
mysterious maze ? Can Scorn and Envy pierce that “ dread abode " Where true
faults rest beneath the eye of God ? Not theirs , ' mid inward darkness , to discern
...
Can dull Indifference or Hate ' s troubled gaze See through the secret heart ' s
mysterious maze ? Can Scorn and Envy pierce that “ dread abode " Where true
faults rest beneath the eye of God ? Not theirs , ' mid inward darkness , to discern
...
Sida 63
... comes from the full heart , and it dwells with charity and love of the pure and
the lofty : it holds no fellowship with sarcasm or scoffing or ribaldry , which are
issues from the hollow or the sickly heart , and are fatal to the sense of reverence
and ...
... comes from the full heart , and it dwells with charity and love of the pure and
the lofty : it holds no fellowship with sarcasm or scoffing or ribaldry , which are
issues from the hollow or the sickly heart , and are fatal to the sense of reverence
and ...
Sida 64
No heart , ” it has been well said , “ would have been strong enough to hold the
woe of Lear and Othello , except that which had the unquenchable elasticity of
Falstaff and the • Midsummer Night ' s Dream . " ' * As in the author , so in the
reader ...
No heart , ” it has been well said , “ would have been strong enough to hold the
woe of Lear and Othello , except that which had the unquenchable elasticity of
Falstaff and the • Midsummer Night ' s Dream . " ' * As in the author , so in the
reader ...
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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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