Cyclopaedia of English Literature: A Selection of the Choicest Productions of English Authors, from Earliest to the Present Time : Connected by a Critical and Biographical HistoryRobert Chambers Gould, Kendall and Lincoln, 1850 |
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Seite v
... given to what might be expected to impart technical knowledge ; and in the cultivation of what is certainly but a branch of the intellectual powers , it has been thought that the great end was gained . It is not necessary here to ...
... given to what might be expected to impart technical knowledge ; and in the cultivation of what is certainly but a branch of the intellectual powers , it has been thought that the great end was gained . It is not necessary here to ...
Seite vii
... given by Layamon , in his translation of Wace , executed about 1180 , 4 KING JAMES I. OF SCOTLAND , 36 James I. , a Prisoner in Windsor , first sees Lady Jane Beaufort , who afterwards was his Queen , 37 5 JOHN LYDGATE , 37 5 ...
... given by Layamon , in his translation of Wace , executed about 1180 , 4 KING JAMES I. OF SCOTLAND , 36 James I. , a Prisoner in Windsor , first sees Lady Jane Beaufort , who afterwards was his Queen , 37 5 JOHN LYDGATE , 37 5 ...
Seite 2
... given in Paradise Lost , and one passage in it might almost be supposed to have been the foundation of a corresponding one in Milton's sublime epic . It is that in which Satan is described as reviving from the consternation of his ...
... given in Paradise Lost , and one passage in it might almost be supposed to have been the foundation of a corresponding one in Milton's sublime epic . It is that in which Satan is described as reviving from the consternation of his ...
Seite 3
... given him the sub - name of the Grammarian . ' Alfric himself declares that he wrote in Anglo - Saxon , and in that avoided the use of all obscure words , in order that he might be understood by unlettered people . As he was really ...
... given him the sub - name of the Grammarian . ' Alfric himself declares that he wrote in Anglo - Saxon , and in that avoided the use of all obscure words , in order that he might be understood by unlettered people . As he was really ...
Seite 4
... given rise to the word now in general use , romance . torical kind relating to England , and communicated them to Geoffrey , by whom they were put into the form of a regular historical work , and introduced for the first time to the ...
... given rise to the word now in general use , romance . torical kind relating to England , and communicated them to Geoffrey , by whom they were put into the form of a regular historical work , and introduced for the first time to the ...
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afterwards beauty Ben Jonson breast breath bright Cæsar called Chaucer court death delight dost doth drama Duchess of Malfy Earl earth Eastward Hoe England English eyes Faery Queen fair fancy fear fire flowers Francis Beaumont gentle Giles Fletcher give grace hand happy hast hath heart heaven Henry Henry VIII holy honour Hudibras John John Lesley Jonson king labour lady language learning leave light live look Lord masque merry mind muse nature never night noble nymph passion Philip Massinger play pleasure poem poet poetical poetry poor praise prince queen racter reign rich Scotland Shakspeare shepherd shine sing sleep song soul Spenser spirit St Serf style sweet taste tell thee thine things thought tion tongue unto verse wind wine words write youth