| Richard Hurd - 1911 - 190 pagina’s
...it did not produce 2 his untimely project) was, that he was somewhat befriended in these fictions, even when interpreted according to the Letter, by...age ; much countenanced, and for a time brought into fresh credit, by the romantic Elizabeth. Her inclina\ tion for the fancies of Chivalry is well known... | |
| Richard Hurd - 1911 - 188 pagina’s
...it did not produce 2 his untimely project) was, that he was somewhat befriended in these fictions, even when interpreted according to the Letter, by...age ; much countenanced, and for a time brought into fresh credit, by the romantic Elizabeth. Her inclination for the fancies of Chivalry is well known... | |
| Marcus Selden Goldman - 1934 - 252 pagina’s
...summer of chivalry, Sir Philip shares Spenser's honors: He [ie, Spenser] was somewhat befriended ... by the romantic spirit of his age; much countenanced, and for a time brought into fresh credit, " by the romantic Elizabeth. Her inclination for the fancies of Chivalry is well known;... | |
| Thomas Warton - 2001 - 144 pagina’s
...if it did not produce his untimely project) was, that he was fomewhat befriended in thefe fictions, even when interpreted according to the Letter, by the romantic Spirit of his age j much countenanced,and for a time broughtinto freih credit, by the romantic Elizabeth. Her inclination... | |
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