Select Essays: Chiefly Bearing on English LiteratureE. Arnold, 1894 - 268 sivua |
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Tulokset 1 - 3 kokonaismäärästä 51
Sivu 21
... literary works of our most brilliant century , I ought to say a few words to you by way of introduction , relating both to the spirit which I mean to bring to that examination , and to that in which I have to ask that you will be kind ...
... literary works of our most brilliant century , I ought to say a few words to you by way of introduction , relating both to the spirit which I mean to bring to that examination , and to that in which I have to ask that you will be kind ...
Sivu 34
... literary religion to which we belong , even though surrounded by the most lively audacities , and to this we would always belong . I , that am a critic , may be allowed to invoke the example of the greatest of critics , Goethe - him of ...
... literary religion to which we belong , even though surrounded by the most lively audacities , and to this we would always belong . I , that am a critic , may be allowed to invoke the example of the greatest of critics , Goethe - him of ...
Sivu 37
... literary immor- tality , and consequently to grant yourself every license . Now it falls to nobody's lot to give himself this feeling of security and of a steady and durable period , one must breathe it in with the air in the hours of ...
... literary immor- tality , and consequently to grant yourself every license . Now it falls to nobody's lot to give himself this feeling of security and of a steady and durable period , one must breathe it in with the air in the hours of ...
Sisältö
OF A LITERARY TRADITION AND IN WHAT SENSE | 21 |
LETTERS OF LORD CHESTERFIELD TO HIS SON 1850 | 51 |
WILLIAM COWPER I 1854 | 74 |
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admirable agreeable ancient beauty Boileau Bonstetten Byerly's Cæsar Cambridge century charm classic Cloth College Cowper critic Crown 8vo Dulwich College Edited Education English Literature essay everything excellent feel France French genius Gibbon give Grammar Greek happy Harvard Harvard University History Homer honour Horace Horace Walpole idea Iliad Illustrations imagination intellect Introduction judgement kind King Edward's School language Latin Lausanne learned less letters literary living LL.D Lord Chesterfield Louis XIV Master Mathematics ment mind Molière Montesquieu moral nature nett never Notes original passage Ph.D philosophy Pisistratus pleasure poem poet poetic poetry Pope Professor Readers Roman Sanskrit School seems Shakespeare society soul speak spirit Taine talent taste things thought Thucydides tion Translated truth University Unwin verse Vocabulary Voltaire volume whole WILLIAM COWPER words writing young