Manual of English LiteratureJ.M. Dent & Company, 1926 - 356 pagina's |
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Pagina 4
... least of the towns , seem generally to have adopted the Latin language and applied themselves to the study of the Latin literature . The diffusion among them of this new taste was one of the first means employed by their politic ...
... least of the towns , seem generally to have adopted the Latin language and applied themselves to the study of the Latin literature . The diffusion among them of this new taste was one of the first means employed by their politic ...
Pagina 42
... least , it amounts to the destruction of much that is most characteristic of the language , -of all that constitutes its beauty to the educated mind , imbued with a feeling for the literature into which it has been wrought , —of ...
... least , it amounts to the destruction of much that is most characteristic of the language , -of all that constitutes its beauty to the educated mind , imbued with a feeling for the literature into which it has been wrought , —of ...
Pagina 326
... least ) both to other parts of the same preface , and to the author's own practice in the greater number of the poems themselves . " The greater part of Coleridge's life and work was engaged in the diffusion of German metaphysics in ...
... least ) both to other parts of the same preface , and to the author's own practice in the greater number of the poems themselves . " The greater part of Coleridge's life and work was engaged in the diffusion of German metaphysics in ...
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A Manual of English Literature: And of the History of the ..., Volumes 1-2 George Lillie Craik Volledige weergave - 1874 |
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