History of English Literature, Том 1H. Holt, 1875 |
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Стр. xi
... imagination - How far it was suited for the epic - Wherein it was allied to the " faërie " -His tentatives - Shepherd's Calendar - His short poems - His masterpiece - The Faërie Queene - His epic is allegorical and yet life - like - It ...
... imagination - How far it was suited for the epic - Wherein it was allied to the " faërie " -His tentatives - Shepherd's Calendar - His short poems - His masterpiece - The Faërie Queene - His epic is allegorical and yet life - like - It ...
Стр. xiii
... imagination and fancy -The Staple of News and Cynthia's Revels - How he treats the comedy of society , and lyrical comedy - His smaller poems - His masques - Theatrical and picturesque manners of the court - The Sad Shepherd - How ...
... imagination and fancy -The Staple of News and Cynthia's Revels - How he treats the comedy of society , and lyrical comedy - His smaller poems - His masques - Theatrical and picturesque manners of the court - The Sad Shepherd - How ...
Стр. 1
... imagination , the isolated caprice of an excited brain , but a transcript of contemporary manners , a manifestation of a certain kind of mind . It was concluded that we might recover , from the monuments of literature , a knowledge of ...
... imagination , the isolated caprice of an excited brain , but a transcript of contemporary manners , a manifestation of a certain kind of mind . It was concluded that we might recover , from the monuments of literature , a knowledge of ...
Стр. 3
... imagining to yourself 1 Mary Wollstonecraft , in her Historical and Moral View of the French Revolution , p . 25 , says , in quoting this passage , " What could be expected from the courtier who could write in these terms to Madame de ...
... imagining to yourself 1 Mary Wollstonecraft , in her Historical and Moral View of the French Revolution , p . 25 , says , in quoting this passage , " What could be expected from the courtier who could write in these terms to Madame de ...
Стр. 4
... imagination first upon the feet of Brahma , next upon his knee , next upon his thigh , next upon his navel , and so on , until , beneath the strain of this intense meditation , hallucinations begin to appear , until all the forms of ...
... imagination first upon the feet of Brahma , next upon his knee , next upon his thigh , next upon his navel , and so on , until , beneath the strain of this intense meditation , hallucinations begin to appear , until all the forms of ...
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amid amongst ancient arms barbarism battle beauty Beowulf blood body bright Cædmon Canterbury Canterbury Tales century character Chaucer chivalry Christian chroniclers civilization common court Cressida death Domesday Book doth dreams England English eyes flowers France French Froissart genius gold grand hand hath heart heaven hell herte hire human hundred Ibid ideas imagination instincts Jötuns king knights ladies land Latin light literature living lords manners middle age mind monk moral nation nature never noble Norman passim passion Petrarch Piers Ploughman pleasure poems poet poetic poetry race religion Robert Wace Robin Hood Roman rose Saxon says sentiment side sing Skalds song Song of Roland soul speak spirit style sweet sword thee ther things thou thought tion translated Troilus Troilus and Cressida trouvères verse villeins voice Warton whole William of Malmesbury words