The Story of English LiteratureMacmillan, 1931 - 624 páginas The function of an introduction to English literature is to interest students in the content and spirit of great books and their relation to their times and to one another. |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 15
Página 17
... king named Arthur . There probably was a real Arthur to start with a good fighting man who got his men together and managed for a while to stave off the attacks of the Anglo - Saxons . The Celts were few and on the whole rather cowed by ...
... king named Arthur . There probably was a real Arthur to start with a good fighting man who got his men together and managed for a while to stave off the attacks of the Anglo - Saxons . The Celts were few and on the whole rather cowed by ...
Página 20
Edmund Kemper Broadus. the stories of King Arthur and his knights were most liked and most often retold . A particularly interesting example of these romances is the poem called Sir Gawain and the Green Knight , composed about the middle ...
Edmund Kemper Broadus. the stories of King Arthur and his knights were most liked and most often retold . A particularly interesting example of these romances is the poem called Sir Gawain and the Green Knight , composed about the middle ...
Página 584
... King Arthur and his knights into his book , Le Morte Darthur , and the first of English printers , William Caxton , had prefaced his imprinting of it with the injunction that " King Arthur ought most to be remembered amongst us English ...
... King Arthur and his knights into his book , Le Morte Darthur , and the first of English printers , William Caxton , had prefaced his imprinting of it with the injunction that " King Arthur ought most to be remembered amongst us English ...
Contenido
THE BEGINNINGS OF LITERATURE IN ENGLAND | 3 |
CHAUCER AND HIS TIMES | 27 |
27 | 44 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 10 secciones no mostradas
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Términos y frases comunes
Addison adventure ballads beauty Ben Jonson Beowulf Bunyan Byron called century characters Chaucer's Church court death delight doth drama dream Dryden Duke Elizabethan England English English poetry essay eyes Faerie Queene fair father feeling hand hath heart heaven human imagination Jane Austen John John Bunyan John Dryden Johnson Keats King King Arthur knights Lady literature live London look Lord Lycidas lyric Macbeth Milton mind miracle plays mood nature never novelist novels phrase Piers Plowman plays plot poems poet poetry Pope prose Puritan Queen readers rhyme rich romantic satire says Scott Shakespeare shepherds sing Sir Bedivere Sir Roger sleep song sonnets soul Spectator Spenser spirit stanza story style sweet Swift tale talk tell Tennyson thee theme things thou thought tion turn Vanity Fair verse vivid words Wordsworth write wrote young