Specimens of Modern English Literary CriticismWilliam Tenney Brewster Macmillan, 1925 - 379 páginas |
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Página xvii
... equal . " Whole rivulets of ink , " as Swift would say , have been expended in the yet unsettled question of what Shakespeare meant Hamlet to mean ; and an equally prolific study could be made of the different interpretations that have ...
... equal . " Whole rivulets of ink , " as Swift would say , have been expended in the yet unsettled question of what Shakespeare meant Hamlet to mean ; and an equally prolific study could be made of the different interpretations that have ...
Página 7
... equal to the emergency . The rule means , he says , that every man must take fivepence halfpenny in every payment , if it be offered ; which , on the next page , becomes simply in every payment ; therefore , making an easy assumption or ...
... equal to the emergency . The rule means , he says , that every man must take fivepence halfpenny in every payment , if it be offered ; which , on the next page , becomes simply in every payment ; therefore , making an easy assumption or ...
Página 10
... equals care for him ; but adds that as he walks the streets he has " a thousand hats and blessings upon old scores which those we call the gentry have forgot . " The people received him as their champion . When he returned from England ...
... equals care for him ; but adds that as he walks the streets he has " a thousand hats and blessings upon old scores which those we call the gentry have forgot . " The people received him as their champion . When he returned from England ...
Página 12
... equal earnestness he still clung to the Test Acts , and assailed the Protestant Dis- senters with all his old bitterness , and ridiculed their claims to 1 To Lord Stafford , November 26 , 1725 . brotherhood with Churchmen . To the end ...
... equal earnestness he still clung to the Test Acts , and assailed the Protestant Dis- senters with all his old bitterness , and ridiculed their claims to 1 To Lord Stafford , November 26 , 1725 . brotherhood with Churchmen . To the end ...
Página 20
... equal proportions amongst us , he seemed the very image of a little French gossiping abbé . Yet all that I have mentioned was , and seemed to be , a trifle by comparison with the infinite pettiness of his matter . Nothing did he utter ...
... equal proportions amongst us , he seemed the very image of a little French gossiping abbé . Yet all that I have mentioned was , and seemed to be , a trifle by comparison with the infinite pettiness of his matter . Nothing did he utter ...
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Términos y frases comunes
admiration alliteration Arnold artistic beauty Besant better called Canterbury Tales character Chaucer classic Coleridge Cowley Dickens Dickens's distinction Dryden Edgar Poe effect English essay estimate example expression eyes fact faculty fancy feeling fiction genius George Eliot give human idea imagination impression intellectual interest John Ruskin judgment kind language less literary criticism literature living manner matter means metaphysical poets Milton mind modern moral nature never Nevermore novel object opinion Ovid passion peculiar perfect perhaps Petrarch philosophical Pickwick Papers pleasure Poe's poem poet poetic poetry principle prose question Quincey Quincey's reader reason regard Robert Montgomery Ruskin seems sense Shakespeare sort soul sound speak spirit stanza story style Suspiria Swift taste things thou thought tion true truth Ulalume Venus and Adonis verse Virgil whole words Wordsworth writing