Essays in Romantic LiteratureBooks for Libraries Press, 1968 - 438 pagina's |
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Pagina 123
... never occurred to him ; could never , I may say , have entered his head . He cannot conceive that any young gentleman nobly born ' should so much as wish to be Phidias or Polycletus or Ana- creon ; 1 and this from no vulgar contempt for ...
... never occurred to him ; could never , I may say , have entered his head . He cannot conceive that any young gentleman nobly born ' should so much as wish to be Phidias or Polycletus or Ana- creon ; 1 and this from no vulgar contempt for ...
Pagina 147
... never complain . They are conditions of success , not excuses for failure ; and to name them is to be ridiculous . The Plu- tarchian hero never does name them . He is obstinate , but not querulous . He cares only for the State ; he ...
... never complain . They are conditions of success , not excuses for failure ; and to name them is to be ridiculous . The Plu- tarchian hero never does name them . He is obstinate , but not querulous . He cares only for the State ; he ...
Pagina 374
... never dulled . The glass of the windows through which he looks out on the world is never ground of set purpose that his mind may the better attend to business within . And to a poet , as to a child , the primal processes of the earth ...
... never dulled . The glass of the windows through which he looks out on the world is never ground of set purpose that his mind may the better attend to business within . And to a poet , as to a child , the primal processes of the earth ...
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
Adonis adventure allusion Amyot Antony artist Beauty Bellay Cæsar called Cato century Chaucer classic colour Coriolanus Court Cynthia's Revels death Dekker delight doth drama Elizabethan England English Europe eyes Fitton Fleay France French George Wyndham Greece Greek hand hath Henry Herbert heroes honour Jonson Julius Cæsar king Lady language Latin legends literary literature lord Harbert Lucrece Lucullus Lycurgus lyrical Mary Fitton ment mind never night North Ovid Parallel Lives passage passion Pericles play Pléiade Plutarch poem poet Poetaster poetry political Pompey praise prose quoted Renaissance rhyme Romance Rome Ronsard Satiromastix Shake Shakespeare song Song of Roland Sonnets speech Spenser strange sweet thee theme Themistocles theory things thou tion translation Troilus trouvères truth turn unto Venus Venus and Adonis verse Villon words writes written wrote