The Story of English LiteratureMacmillan, 1932 - 624 páginas |
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Página 89
... beginning of this chapter . Interesting in itself because it led up to the establishment of the royal line to which Queen Eliza- beth belonged , and treated with particular fullness and color in the pages of Hall and Holinshed , it ...
... beginning of this chapter . Interesting in itself because it led up to the establishment of the royal line to which Queen Eliza- beth belonged , and treated with particular fullness and color in the pages of Hall and Holinshed , it ...
Página 139
... beginning of this chapter that the art of prose was just beginning to find itself in Elizabethan times . But as one considers the ease and grace of Sidney , the faultless marshaling of phrase and clause in Hooker , one realizes that ...
... beginning of this chapter that the art of prose was just beginning to find itself in Elizabethan times . But as one considers the ease and grace of Sidney , the faultless marshaling of phrase and clause in Hooker , one realizes that ...
Página 390
... beginning to get a foothold . Pope's generation had comfortably taken for granted a social system which played into the hands of a privileged few and did not bother about the rights of the ordinary man ( see page 284 ) . The new ...
... beginning to get a foothold . Pope's generation had comfortably taken for granted a social system which played into the hands of a privileged few and did not bother about the rights of the ordinary man ( see page 284 ) . The new ...
Términos y frases comunes
Addison adventure Anglo-Saxons Ballads BAYEUX TAPESTRY beauty began Ben Jonson Beowulf Browning's Bunyan Byron called century characters Chaucer's Christian Church court death delight doth drama dream Dryden Elizabethan England English English poetry essay eyes Faerie Queene fair fancy feeling Forsyte Saga hand happy Hardy's heart heaven human imagination Jane Austen John Keats King King Arthur Kipling knights Lady land literature live London look Lord Lycidas Milton mind miracle plays mood narrative nature never novelist novels phrase plot poems poetry poets Pope prose Puritan Queen rhyme rich romantic Rudyard Kipling satire says Shakespeare Shelley shepherds sing Sir Roger songs sort soul Spectator Spenser spirit stanzas story sweet Tatler tell Tennyson thee themes things Thomas Hardy thou thought tion turn Vanity Fair verse vivid words Wordsworth write written wrote young