A Literary History of EnglandLongmans, Green and Company, 1929 - 392 pagina's |
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Pagina 69
... scenes follow each . other in chronological order , and the work is like a portion of Holinshed or Froissart versified for the stage . Shakespeare was not content with so crude a treatment . He tried to reconcile the facts of history ...
... scenes follow each . other in chronological order , and the work is like a portion of Holinshed or Froissart versified for the stage . Shakespeare was not content with so crude a treatment . He tried to reconcile the facts of history ...
Pagina 338
... scenes of much truer pathos than the exaggerated descriptions of Little Nell and Paul Dombey . For the next few years , much of Dickens's energy was consumed in the public readings from his novels which he gave in England and America ...
... scenes of much truer pathos than the exaggerated descriptions of Little Nell and Paul Dombey . For the next few years , much of Dickens's energy was consumed in the public readings from his novels which he gave in England and America ...
Pagina 341
... scenes the dialogue is consummate , as in the chapter where Lady Castlewood contests with the Duke of Hamilton her daughter's right to receive presents from Esmond . And Esmond's interview with Lady Castlewood after his return from the ...
... scenes the dialogue is consummate , as in the chapter where Lady Castlewood contests with the Duke of Hamilton her daughter's right to receive presents from Esmond . And Esmond's interview with Lady Castlewood after his return from the ...
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