The Great Tradition in English Literature: From Shakespeare to Jane Austen |
Vanuit het boek
Resultaten 1-3 van 27
Pagina 158
... one cannot help feeling that the loss of Heaven for Satan and of Paradise for Adam and Eve symbolise something even greater and wider than what they are intended to do in the successful scheme of the justi- fication of God's ways .
... one cannot help feeling that the loss of Heaven for Satan and of Paradise for Adam and Eve symbolise something even greater and wider than what they are intended to do in the successful scheme of the justi- fication of God's ways .
Pagina 212
The sums received under conditions amounting virtually to a forced sale were usually too small to be em- ployed successfully in any other business even if the farmer had known how to make good use of them .
The sums received under conditions amounting virtually to a forced sale were usually too small to be em- ployed successfully in any other business even if the farmer had known how to make good use of them .
Pagina 305
... to successful manufacturers authori- tatively to tell their children or themselves what model to imitate for a successful life . It is precisely this all important question to which the earliest novels directly address themselves .
... to successful manufacturers authori- tatively to tell their children or themselves what model to imitate for a successful life . It is precisely this all important question to which the earliest novels directly address themselves .
Wat mensen zeggen - Een review schrijven
We hebben geen reviews gevonden op de gebruikelijke plaatsen.
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
accept already attack attempt Bacon beginning better Bunyan called cause century Church common complete concern consider continued course court critical death Defoe early effect Elizabethan England English equally evidently example expressed father feeling Fielding finally forced give hand hath hope House human important increase interest Jane Austen king lady land later learned least less live London Lord marriage matter means Milton mind nature never novel perhaps play political poor position possible present published reason religious respect rich says seemed sense Shakespeare social society soon speak successful Swift tell things thou thought tion trade true turn whole wife woman writing written wrote young