History of English Literature, Том 2Edmonston and Douglas, 1873 - Всего страниц: 722 |
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Стр. 19
... soul . An inner man is concealed be neath the outer man ; the second does but reveal the first . You look at his house , furniture , dress ; and that in order to discover in them the marks of his habits and tastes , the degree of his ...
... soul . An inner man is concealed be neath the outer man ; the second does but reveal the first . You look at his house , furniture , dress ; and that in order to discover in them the marks of his habits and tastes , the degree of his ...
Стр. 20
... soul ; they had not seen the infinite diversity and marvellous complexity of souls ; they did not know that the moral con- stitution of a people or an age is as particular and distinct as the physical structure of a family of plants or ...
... soul ; they had not seen the infinite diversity and marvellous complexity of souls ; they did not know that the moral con- stitution of a people or an age is as particular and distinct as the physical structure of a family of plants or ...
Стр. 21
... souls , before whom every soul is sin- ful , worthy of punishment , incapable of virtue or salvation , except by the pow er of conscience which He calls forth , and the renewal of heart which He produces . That is the master idea ...
... souls , before whom every soul is sin- ful , worthy of punishment , incapable of virtue or salvation , except by the pow er of conscience which He calls forth , and the renewal of heart which He produces . That is the master idea ...
Стр. 52
... soul should be led to hell . Then should the harper become so sorrowful that he could not remair . ong the men , but fre- quented the wood , and sat on the mountains , both day and night , weaping and harping , so that the woods shock ...
... soul should be led to hell . Then should the harper become so sorrowful that he could not remair . ong the men , but fre- quented the wood , and sat on the mountains , both day and night , weaping and harping , so that the woods shock ...
Стр. 115
... soul was , and how it entered the body , fasts , with entranced eyes ; knotty - fin- he compared it to jam covered up in gered saints with sunken chests , -all white bread quite hot . What would the touching or lamentable visions of ...
... soul was , and how it entered the body , fasts , with entranced eyes ; knotty - fin- he compared it to jam covered up in gered saints with sunken chests , -all white bread quite hot . What would the touching or lamentable visions of ...
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amidst amongst amuse ancholy arms beauty Ben Jonson Beowulf blood Cædmon Canterbury Tales century character charming Chaucer Christian church coarse Coriolanus court death dreams Dryden emotion England English eyes fancy father feel France French genius give Goethe hand happy head hear heart heaven human Ibid ideas images imagination imitation instincts Italy king ladies letters light literature living lofty look Lord Lord Byron manners marriage ment mind Molière moral nature ness never night noble paint passions Petrarch philosophy play pleasure poem poet poetic poetry Puritans race reason religion Saxon says Sejanus sentiment Shakspeare sing society song soul speak spirit style sweet Tartuffe taste thee Thierry and Theodoret thing thou thought tion trouvères truth ture verse vice virtue Volpone Voltaire whilst whole wife wish woman words write young