Essays by Divers Hands: Being the Transactions of the Royal Society of Literature, Band 3 |
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Seite vi
... becoming increasingly the lingua franca of the world , its vocabulary and syntax are day by day subject to corrupting influences , of which Sir Henry gives some highly amusing examples . But I , for one , share his confidence that the ...
... becoming increasingly the lingua franca of the world , its vocabulary and syntax are day by day subject to corrupting influences , of which Sir Henry gives some highly amusing examples . But I , for one , share his confidence that the ...
Seite 9
... become " valley " to distinguish it from " veil , " and for the same reason vails " have been superseded by " tips . " Seamen have long dis- puted whether a ship is " under weigh " or " under way " ; and it is curious that " road ...
... become " valley " to distinguish it from " veil , " and for the same reason vails " have been superseded by " tips . " Seamen have long dis- puted whether a ship is " under weigh " or " under way " ; and it is curious that " road ...
Seite 14
... becoming the universal language , and International Conferences have actually declared that it ought to take that place . On the other hand , there is a group in the United States who talk of frankly abandoning the name and the use of ...
... becoming the universal language , and International Conferences have actually declared that it ought to take that place . On the other hand , there is a group in the United States who talk of frankly abandoning the name and the use of ...
Seite 22
... become divorced in sympathy . It is doubtful whether the actor , in his heart , despises the scholar , or the scholar the actor , more . And yet each has need of the other . The actor often sins , no doubt , in pure ignorance of what ...
... become divorced in sympathy . It is doubtful whether the actor , in his heart , despises the scholar , or the scholar the actor , more . And yet each has need of the other . The actor often sins , no doubt , in pure ignorance of what ...
Seite 42
... become purely arbi- trary . Sometimes they are merely a matter of the coterie to which an author belongs , and they are marked by an intolerance , a dogmatism and an ignorance for which there is no parallel in our litera- ture . The ...
... become purely arbi- trary . Sometimes they are merely a matter of the coterie to which an author belongs , and they are marked by an intolerance , a dogmatism and an ignorance for which there is no parallel in our litera- ture . The ...
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actor aesthetic ALFRED NOYES appear appreciation Apuleius artist audience beauty called Carlyle centenary century Cezanne Cobbett colour complete concerned consider contemporary course criticism decorative Demogorgon drama dramatic art dramatist edited El Greco Elisabethan England English English language essay expression fact feeling flowers genius Greco historical human imaginative Impressionist instance intellectual Keats landscape language Latin light lines literary lyrical Mary Godwin matter means ment merely modern movement natural never Noyes Oxford India paper painter painting passages picture pigment plays poem poet Poetical poetry Post-Impressionism Post-Impressionists present principles Professor Prometheus pure realise recently recognised Revolt of Islam rhetoric Roman scholar seems sense Shakespeare Shakespeare Apocrypha Shelley Shelley's Sir Henry SIR HENRY NEWBOLT Skylark sort soul speak speech stage structure Tennyson theatre things thought true universe verse W. E. Henley whole William Cobbett word Wordsworth writing