The Great Tradition in English Literature from Shakespeare to Shaw: William Shakespeare to Jane AustenMonthly Review Press, 1969 - 946 pagina's |
Vanuit het boek
Resultaten 1-3 van 84
Pagina 9
... nature , seeing that by memory and wit also he conceiveth the nature of all things . For there is nothing here in this world , neither in heaven above , nor in earth beneath , but he by his reason com- prehendeth it . So that I think we ...
... nature , seeing that by memory and wit also he conceiveth the nature of all things . For there is nothing here in this world , neither in heaven above , nor in earth beneath , but he by his reason com- prehendeth it . So that I think we ...
Pagina 87
... nature of things . And what the posterity and issue of so honorable a match may be ; it is not hard to consider . Print- ing , a gross invention ; artillery , a thing that lay not far out of the way ; the compass , a thing partly known ...
... nature of things . And what the posterity and issue of so honorable a match may be ; it is not hard to consider . Print- ing , a gross invention ; artillery , a thing that lay not far out of the way ; the compass , a thing partly known ...
Pagina 109
... nature alone can make them act upon one another . The effect and intention of these arguments is to convince men that nothing really great , nothing by which nature can be commanded and subdued , is to be expected from human art and ...
... nature alone can make them act upon one another . The effect and intention of these arguments is to convince men that nothing really great , nothing by which nature can be commanded and subdued , is to be expected from human art and ...
Inhoudsopgave
THE ELIZABETHAN AGE AND THE BOURGEOIS REVOLUTION | 3 |
THE AGE OF REASON | 206 |
VOLUME II | 330 |
Copyright | |
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
already attack Bacon better bourgeois bourgeoisie Bunyan Cassandra Church common contemporary course court death Defoe Defoe's eighteenth century Elizabeth Elizabethan England English Falstaff father Fielding's forced give Hamlet hath Henry human husband Iago important interest Jane Austen John Bunyan Jonathan Swift king kingdom lady land later learned LELAND LELAND STANFORD less liberty literary literature live London Lord man's Margaret Webster marriage ment Milton Model Army Moll Flanders nation nature never Northanger Abbey novel Othello pamphlet Parliament perhaps Pilgrim's Progress play poet political poor preaching Pride and Prejudice published Queen religious rich satire says Shakespeare social society speak STANFORD Swift tell theatre thee things thou thought throne tion Tom Jones Tory trade true truth UNIVERSITY Usury Whig wife woman women writing written wrote young