The Literature and the Literary Men of Great Britain and Ireland: In Two Volumes, Band 1Harper, 1851 - 576 Seiten |
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Seite 20
... king ! I behold thee sitting on mists dimly gleaming in all thine arms . Thy form now is not the terror of the valiant . It is like the watery cloud when we see the stars behind it with their weeping eyes . Thy shield is the aged moon ...
... king ! I behold thee sitting on mists dimly gleaming in all thine arms . Thy form now is not the terror of the valiant . It is like the watery cloud when we see the stars behind it with their weeping eyes . Thy shield is the aged moon ...
Seite 26
... king Alfred , to whom our remarks have now brought us down , must therefore be emphatically regarded as a bright light in the midst of the surrounding gloom . In this prince , learning and authorship graced the ... KING ALFRED . KING ALFRED.
... king Alfred , to whom our remarks have now brought us down , must therefore be emphatically regarded as a bright light in the midst of the surrounding gloom . In this prince , learning and authorship graced the ... KING ALFRED . KING ALFRED.
Seite 31
... kings of England gave to the poets of their own country , and from the gen- eral depression of the Anglo - Saxon language , the natural result was that the distinguished literary names of the first two centuries after the Conquest ...
... kings of England gave to the poets of their own country , and from the gen- eral depression of the Anglo - Saxon language , the natural result was that the distinguished literary names of the first two centuries after the Conquest ...
Seite 33
... King Robert of Sicily , ' and ' The Death of Arthur , ' were the principal ; but these we can not farther notice ... kings were frequently their companions , and often vied with them in their own favorite strains . Of the poetry of these ...
... King Robert of Sicily , ' and ' The Death of Arthur , ' were the principal ; but these we can not farther notice ... kings were frequently their companions , and often vied with them in their own favorite strains . Of the poetry of these ...
Seite 44
... king's page , Chaucer was elevated to the position of ' Gentleman of the King's Privy Chamber , ' with twenty additional marks to his annual income . From the position of Gentleman of the King's Privy Chamber , ' he became shield ...
... king's page , Chaucer was elevated to the position of ' Gentleman of the King's Privy Chamber , ' with twenty additional marks to his annual income . From the position of Gentleman of the King's Privy Chamber , ' he became shield ...
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afterward beauty became Ben Jonson bishop born Cæsar Cambridge character Chaucer church College court death delight died divine doth dramas Earl earth Elizabeth England English English language eyes Faery Queen fair fancy father fear flowers genius grace hath heart heaven Henry the Eighth holy honour Hudibras Inner Temple James JOHN Jonson king king's lady language Latin learning Leicestershire light literary literature live London Lord mind Mirror for Magistrates moral muse nature never night Oxford passage passed passion period play poem poet poetical poetry praise prince prose published queen reign remarks satire Scotland Shakspeare sing sleep song soon soul spirit studies style sweet tell thee things thought tongue translation Trinity College university of Cambridge university of Oxford unto verse Westminster Abbey Westminster school Wickliffe wind writers wrote youth