Interpretations of Literature, Band 1Dodd, Mead, 1922 |
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Seite 28
... lives of many country clergymen were then just as he described them . Are they very different to - day ? I doubt whether they are in relation to the poorer classes , who are still separated from the clergyman by social distinctions of ...
... lives of many country clergymen were then just as he described them . Are they very different to - day ? I doubt whether they are in relation to the poorer classes , who are still separated from the clergyman by social distinctions of ...
Seite 33
... live for a time . The father hears that she is very beautiful , very graceful , very fond of society ; and he is at once scandalised and alarmed . What , his daughter becom- ing worldly ! He at once writes her a letter telling her to ...
... live for a time . The father hears that she is very beautiful , very graceful , very fond of society ; and he is at once scandalised and alarmed . What , his daughter becom- ing worldly ! He at once writes her a letter telling her to ...
Seite 35
... live and work . His surroundings were full of vulgarity and pain . Every- where he found himself confronted by what Carlyle has so well called " the brutality of facts . " But he recognised that all this was life — that it was necessary ...
... live and work . His surroundings were full of vulgarity and pain . Every- where he found himself confronted by what Carlyle has so well called " the brutality of facts . " But he recognised that all this was life — that it was necessary ...
Seite 39
... lives . Natural scenery can not make us happy in a time of great moral pain , or of great sorrow caused by the death of some one whom we have loved . On the con- trary , at such times the beautiful sky , beautiful flowers , beautiful ...
... lives . Natural scenery can not make us happy in a time of great moral pain , or of great sorrow caused by the death of some one whom we have loved . On the con- trary , at such times the beautiful sky , beautiful flowers , beautiful ...
Seite 46
... live yet ; One sad epistle thence may cure mankind Of the plague spread by bundles left behind . The very first word ... lives of the Romans under the empire , but is nevertheless an extremely immoral book , treating of vices whose very ...
... live yet ; One sad epistle thence may cure mankind Of the plague spread by bundles left behind . The very first word ... lives of the Romans under the empire , but is nevertheless an extremely immoral book , treating of vices whose very ...
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artistic beautiful become bird Blake blank verse Byron called century character Charlotte Brontë charm child classic clothes Coleridge conservatism Cowper Crabbe critics death dream emotional English literature English poetry expression extraordinary fact father feel French George Eliot girl give Greek happy heart human idea imagine influence Japanese Japanese literature Keats kind Kingsley Lafcadio Hearn learned lecture literary live Matthew Arnold Mazeppa means mind moral nature never night novels Omar Khayyám pain passion perhaps person philosophy poem poet poetry prose religion religious represents romantic Sartor Resartus sense Shelley Shelley's Siege of Corinth sing society verse song soul speak spirit stanza story strange student style tell Tennyson thee things Thomas Hood thou thought tion to-day true truth ture understand whole woman words Wordsworth write written wrote young