The GentlemanTicknor and Fields, 1863 - 159 páginas |
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Página 17
... Richardson , drawn out of still deeper recesses of the past , from the very well - head of English poetry , - a brief sentence , fraught with that homely wisdom - which has so much helped to keep the name of 2 PRELUSIVE . 17.
... Richardson , drawn out of still deeper recesses of the past , from the very well - head of English poetry , - a brief sentence , fraught with that homely wisdom - which has so much helped to keep the name of 2 PRELUSIVE . 17.
Página 29
... poetry in action . History would not have gloried in them as she does , we should not be busied with them now , had they not carried in their breasts that eager , insatiate longing for the better , which , being a flame that heats the ...
... poetry in action . History would not have gloried in them as she does , we should not be busied with them now , had they not carried in their breasts that eager , insatiate longing for the better , which , being a flame that heats the ...
Página 77
... among them . Jupiter , their chief , beat his wife ; so his claim is bar- red at once , without looking further into his way of life , which will not bear looking into . Apollo , as the God of Poetry and the Arts GRECIAN MYTHOLOGY . 77.
... among them . Jupiter , their chief , beat his wife ; so his claim is bar- red at once , without looking further into his way of life , which will not bear looking into . Apollo , as the God of Poetry and the Arts GRECIAN MYTHOLOGY . 77.
Página 78
George Henry Calvert. Apollo , as the God of Poetry and the Arts , ought to have been a gentleman ; but he was so under the dominion of self and passion , that , when King Laomedon refused him the prom- ised reward for helping to build ...
George Henry Calvert. Apollo , as the God of Poetry and the Arts , ought to have been a gentleman ; but he was so under the dominion of self and passion , that , when King Laomedon refused him the prom- ised reward for helping to build ...
Página 84
... poetry , with the aroma of life , he needs , as we have said , a sound moral pith for his full florescence ; and hence the Homeric Gods and Heroes come not up to the highest standard of gentlemanly manhood . Nor in Shakspeare should we ...
... poetry , with the aroma of life , he needs , as we have said , a sound moral pith for his full florescence ; and hence the Homeric Gods and Heroes come not up to the highest standard of gentlemanly manhood . Nor in Shakspeare should we ...
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æsthetic Alcibiades ancient Bayard bearing beau beauty born breath Brutus Cæsar Cato century Charles Lamb Chesterfield Christ's Hospital Christian civilization coarse Coleridge cordial courtesy cultivated daily deed deep demeanor dignity Don Quixote duel earth elevated esty fashion feeling finer fruit generosity gentle gentleman gentlemanhood gentlemanly grace grandeur Greeks gross heart high-bred highest honor humanity ideal illustrate individual intellectual king Knight ladyhood less liberal live look Lord Chesterfield manhood manliness manners master mental mind moral freedom nature needs ness outward Paul Plato poet poetic poetry polish pride Prince Prince Regent Prospero purity rank refined renowned Roger de Coverley Roman Senate Romans says selfish sense sensibilities Shakspeare Sidney Sir Philip Sidney Sir Roger social Socrates soul speech spiritual sublime superficial sympathy tenderness things thou thought tion tleman tone truth Uncle Toby uncon unconscious vanity virtue vulgarity word worldly Zutphen