Cyclopædia of English Literature: A Selection of the Choicest Productions of English Authors, from the Earliest to the Present Time, Connected by a Critical and Biographical History ...Robert Chambers Gould, Kendall and Lincoln, 1848 |
Результаты поиска по книге
Результаты 1 – 5 из 100
Стр. 1
... whole of England ; the Celtic , which had been the language of the aboriginal people , shrinking before it into Wales , Cornwall , and other remote parts of the island , as the Indian tongues are now retiring before the advance of the ...
... whole of England ; the Celtic , which had been the language of the aboriginal people , shrinking before it into Wales , Cornwall , and other remote parts of the island , as the Indian tongues are now retiring before the advance of the ...
Стр. 2
... whole of the sacred history . We are told that he was con- tinually occupied in repeating to himself what he heard , and , " like a clean animal , ruminating it , he turned it into most sweet verse . " Cadmon thus composed many poems on ...
... whole of the sacred history . We are told that he was con- tinually occupied in repeating to himself what he heard , and , " like a clean animal , ruminating it , he turned it into most sweet verse . " Cadmon thus composed many poems on ...
Стр. 5
... whole style of this composition , which is broken into a series of short unconnected sentences , and in which the construction is as plain and artless as possible , and perfectly free from inversions , ap- pears to indicate that little ...
... whole style of this composition , which is broken into a series of short unconnected sentences , and in which the construction is as plain and artless as possible , and perfectly free from inversions , ap- pears to indicate that little ...
Стр. 22
... whole and plein Yet aye beware of doubleness . Fortunes wheel go'th round about A thousand times day and night , Whose course standeth ever in doubt For to transmuel " she is so light , For which adverteth in your sight Th ' untrust of ...
... whole and plein Yet aye beware of doubleness . Fortunes wheel go'th round about A thousand times day and night , Whose course standeth ever in doubt For to transmuel " she is so light , For which adverteth in your sight Th ' untrust of ...
Стр. 34
... whole withouten rotting . But I trow that fiends made them seem to be so whole , withouten rotting . But that might not be to my avys , that so many should have entered so newly , ne so many newly slain , without stinking and rotting ...
... whole withouten rotting . But I trow that fiends made them seem to be so whole , withouten rotting . But that might not be to my avys , that so many should have entered so newly , ne so many newly slain , without stinking and rotting ...
Другие издания - Просмотреть все
Часто встречающиеся слова и выражения
afterwards beauty Ben Jonson breast breath bright Cæsar called Chaucer court death delight dost doth drama drink Earl earth England English eyes Faery Queen fair fancy Faustus fear fire flowers FRANCIS BEAUMONT genius gentle Giles Fletcher give grace hand happy hast hath hear heart heaven Henry Henry VIII honour John John Lesley Jonson king labour lady language learning leave light live look Lord Macbeth masque merry Michael Drayton mind muse nature never night noble nymph o'er passion play pleasure poem poet poetical poetry poor praise prince published Queen racter reign rich Scotland Shakspeare shepherd sing sleep song soul speak Spenser spirit St Serf style sweet taste tell thee thine things thou art thought tion tongue unto verse William Davenant wind wine words write youth