The Great Tradition in English Literature from Shakespeare to Shaw, Volume 1Citadel Press, 1953 - 946 pagina's |
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Pagina 6
... beginning of the century ! It is easy for us today to overlook the genuine advance involved in this substitution of a bourgeois for a feudal nobility . But we must remember that when we speak of the Elizabethan Age as a revolutionary ...
... beginning of the century ! It is easy for us today to overlook the genuine advance involved in this substitution of a bourgeois for a feudal nobility . But we must remember that when we speak of the Elizabethan Age as a revolutionary ...
Pagina 342
... beginning . In addition to its much more subtle and consistent parody of other popular literary forms , the beginning of which we have al- ready noted in her juvenilia , Northanger Abbey touches , lightly it is true , on the essential ...
... beginning . In addition to its much more subtle and consistent parody of other popular literary forms , the beginning of which we have al- ready noted in her juvenilia , Northanger Abbey touches , lightly it is true , on the essential ...
Pagina 461
... beginning of his freethinking was too painfully associated with his father's bitter disappointment for him to discuss it in any detail . However , he was still - at fifteen - just beginning to question , and unwilling to shock his ...
... beginning of his freethinking was too painfully associated with his father's bitter disappointment for him to discuss it in any detail . However , he was still - at fifteen - just beginning to question , and unwilling to shock his ...
Inhoudsopgave
THE ELIZABETHAN AGE AND THE BOURGEOIS REVOLUTION | 3 |
THE AGE OF REASON | 206 |
THE GREAT ROMANTICS AND THE DEMOCRATIC REVOLUTION | 375 |
Copyright | |
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Adam Bede already attack beginning bourgeois bourgeoisie brother Bunyan Byron century Charles Chartist Church Coleridge contemporary criticism death Defoe Dickens early England English essay Fabian Society father feel forced freedom French French Revolution G. K. Chesterton George Eliot give happy hath Hazlitt heart hope human Huxley important interest Jane Austen Keats king Lamb later Leigh Hunt less letter liberty literary living London look Lord man's marriage Mary ment Middlemarch Milton mind Morris nature never Northanger Abbey novel Othello Parliament perhaps Pilgrim's Progress play poem poet poetry political poor published radical revolution rich says sense Shakespeare Shaw Shaw's Shelley Shelley's social society soul Southey speak struggle theatre things thou thought tion Whig wife William Morris woman Wordsworth writing written wrote young