History of English Literature, Том 1H. Holt, 1875 |
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Стр. 31
... wish to go . " " We hewed with our swords , " says a song attributed to Ragnar Lodbrog ; " was it not like that hour when my bright bride I seated by me on the couch ? " One of them , at the monastery of Peterborough , kills with his ...
... wish to go . " " We hewed with our swords , " says a song attributed to Ragnar Lodbrog ; " was it not like that hour when my bright bride I seated by me on the couch ? " One of them , at the monastery of Peterborough , kills with his ...
Стр. 61
... wishes to impress upon the mind of his hearers an idea which is not clear to them . Boethius had for his audience senators , men of culture , who understood as well as we the slightest mythological allusion . Alfred is obliged to take ...
... wishes to impress upon the mind of his hearers an idea which is not clear to them . Boethius had for his audience senators , men of culture , who understood as well as we the slightest mythological allusion . Alfred is obliged to take ...
Стр. 69
... wishing to have his son taught Danish , had to send him to Bayeux , where it was still spoken . The great masses always form the race in the end , and generally the genius and language . Thus this people , so transformed , quickly ...
... wishing to have his son taught Danish , had to send him to Bayeux , where it was still spoken . The great masses always form the race in the end , and generally the genius and language . Thus this people , so transformed , quickly ...
Стр. 79
... wishes to be merry - it is the state he prefers , the end and aim of his life ; and especially to laugh at other people . The short verse of his fabliaux gambols and leaps like a schoolboy released from school , over all things ...
... wishes to be merry - it is the state he prefers , the end and aim of his life ; and especially to laugh at other people . The short verse of his fabliaux gambols and leaps like a schoolboy released from school , over all things ...
Стр. 80
... wishing to ring it , he uses irony , enjoys and relishes it , pretends to wax impatient with the poor fool whom he has caught , calls him proud , complains because the other does not answer , and because he wishes to rise to the clouds ...
... wishing to ring it , he uses irony , enjoys and relishes it , pretends to wax impatient with the poor fool whom he has caught , calls him proud , complains because the other does not answer , and because he wishes to rise to the clouds ...
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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