A Literary History of EnglandLongmans, Green and Company, 1929 - 392 pagina's |
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Pagina 157
... never bear that - good Mirabell , don't let us be familiar or fond , nor kiss before folks , like my Lady Fadler and Sir Francis ; nor go to Hyde Park together the first Sunday in a new chariot , to provoke eyes and whispers , and then ...
... never bear that - good Mirabell , don't let us be familiar or fond , nor kiss before folks , like my Lady Fadler and Sir Francis ; nor go to Hyde Park together the first Sunday in a new chariot , to provoke eyes and whispers , and then ...
Pagina 213
... never wholly new ; in what we retain , we are never wholly obsolete . Nor will Burke admit any but the highest conceptions of man and of the state . In every age when the founda- tions of society are discussed by the multitude , there ...
... never wholly new ; in what we retain , we are never wholly obsolete . Nor will Burke admit any but the highest conceptions of man and of the state . In every age when the founda- tions of society are discussed by the multitude , there ...
Pagina 311
... never takes unfair advantage , never mistakes personalities or sharp sayings for arguments , or insinuates evil which he dare not say out . From a long - sighted prudence , he observes the maxim of the ancient sage , that we should ever ...
... never takes unfair advantage , never mistakes personalities or sharp sayings for arguments , or insinuates evil which he dare not say out . From a long - sighted prudence , he observes the maxim of the ancient sage , that we should ever ...
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
admiration Anglo-Saxon appeared beauty Beelzebub began Ben Jonson blank verse Byron cæsura career character charm Chaucer chief Church Coleridge Commodus couplet criticism death delight drama dream Dryden Elizabethan England English English poetry epic essays expression Faerie Queene Falstaff feeling fiction French Revolution genius give greatest heart heroic couplet honour human humour imagination instance Jane Austen Johnson Keats King Lady language lines literary literature living lyrical Lyrical Ballads manner master metre Milton mind narrative nature never novel novelist Paradise Lost passages passion perhaps Pindaric play poem poet poet's poetic poetry political Pope praise prose qualities reader rhyme romance satire scenes Scott sense Shakespeare Shelley sonnets speeches Spenser spirit stanza story style Swift taste Tennyson thee things thou thought tragedy verse Victorian Whig whole words Wordsworth writers written wrote