History of English Literature, Том 2H. Altemus Company, 1898 |
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Стр. 6
... continually in his mind , to scatter his pages whether he would or no , with recollections of them . He dug into the orators , critics , scholiasts , gram- marians , and compilers of inferior rank ; he picked up 1 Ben Jonson's Poems ...
... continually in his mind , to scatter his pages whether he would or no , with recollections of them . He dug into the orators , critics , scholiasts , gram- marians , and compilers of inferior rank ; he picked up 1 Ben Jonson's Poems ...
Стр. 8
... intuitions , but by consecutive deductions ; we can walk with him without need of bounding , and we are continually kept upon the straight path : antithesis of words unfolds antithesis of thoughts 8 BOOK II . THE RENAISSANCE .
... intuitions , but by consecutive deductions ; we can walk with him without need of bounding , and we are continually kept upon the straight path : antithesis of words unfolds antithesis of thoughts 8 BOOK II . THE RENAISSANCE .
Стр. 26
... continual rheum , Forth the resolved corners of his eyes . C. Is't possible ? Yet I am better , ha ! How does he , with the swimming of his head ? M. O , sir , ' tis past the scotomy ; he now Hath lost his feeling , and hath left to ...
... continual rheum , Forth the resolved corners of his eyes . C. Is't possible ? Yet I am better , ha ! How does he , with the swimming of his head ? M. O , sir , ' tis past the scotomy ; he now Hath lost his feeling , and hath left to ...
Стр. 73
... continually to the roots , try and treat our words as numbers , our sentences as equations ; we employ but general terms , which every mind can understand , and regular constructions , into which any mind can enter ; we attain justness ...
... continually to the roots , try and treat our words as numbers , our sentences as equations ; we employ but general terms , which every mind can understand , and regular constructions , into which any mind can enter ; we attain justness ...
Стр. 82
... continually sink , the outbursts of passion which degrade them , the indecent , harsh , or foul words , the atrocious . deeds in which licence revels , the brutality and ferocity of primitive nature , is the work of a free and unen ...
... continually sink , the outbursts of passion which degrade them , the indecent , harsh , or foul words , the atrocious . deeds in which licence revels , the brutality and ferocity of primitive nature , is the work of a free and unen ...
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amidst beauty become Ben Jonson blood brain Cæsar characters Christian church comedy conscience Coriolanus Corvino cries Cymbeline Cynthia's Revels death Desdemona divine doth dream dry idea emotions England eyes faith Falstaff fancy father flowers fool genius grace Hamlet hand hath head hear heart heaven honour human Ibid ideas images imagination insults Jonson Juliet king lady living look Lord Macbeth manners married metaphors Midsummer Night's Dream Milton mind Mitford Molière moral Morose Mosca murder nature never night noble Othello Paradise Lost passion play pleasure poem poet poetical poetry Puritan reason religion Renaissance Romeo Romeo and Juliet Rosalind says Sejanus sentiments Shakspeare Shakspeare's sing sleep smile Sonnet Sonnet 29 Sonnet 71 soul speak spirit splendours style sublime sweet tell tender thee things thou thought tion unto virtue Volpone weeps whilst whole wife woman words