Essays by Divers Hands: Being the Transactions of the Royal Society of Literature, Band 1 |
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Seite vii
... facts , the Italian point of view and the native associations must have been lacking . The interpretation would have been a view from a less advantageous angle , an effort more of the intellectual and less of the intui- tive faculties ...
... facts , the Italian point of view and the native associations must have been lacking . The interpretation would have been a view from a less advantageous angle , an effort more of the intellectual and less of the intui- tive faculties ...
Seite ix
... fact , upon his own impulse and out of his own great experience of the nations of the East , developed the idea which is now the key- note of our international work . He looks at the four hundred millions of non - British peoples among ...
... fact , upon his own impulse and out of his own great experience of the nations of the East , developed the idea which is now the key- note of our international work . He looks at the four hundred millions of non - British peoples among ...
Seite 3
... fact that the resurgence of the lyric first shows itself just after the collapse in 1742 of the long rule of Walpole . It was in that year that Gray wrote his Eton Ode and his Hymn to Adversity , and began to compose his Elegy . It was ...
... fact that the resurgence of the lyric first shows itself just after the collapse in 1742 of the long rule of Walpole . It was in that year that Gray wrote his Eton Ode and his Hymn to Adversity , and began to compose his Elegy . It was ...
Seite 11
... fact that it is the raw material of what he distilled and crystallised into the matchless " How sleep the brave . " For these two divine stanzas praise would be an impertinence . They are almost too familiar to quote , yet I cannot deny ...
... fact that it is the raw material of what he distilled and crystallised into the matchless " How sleep the brave . " For these two divine stanzas praise would be an impertinence . They are almost too familiar to quote , yet I cannot deny ...
Seite 16
... fact generally forgotten - is so named in virtue of the last three stanzas , the epitaph with which the piece concludes . Dryden's poem " to the pious memory of Mrs. Anne Killigrew " was entitled by him an Ode , but is generally , and ...
... fact generally forgotten - is so named in virtue of the last three stanzas , the epitaph with which the piece concludes . Dryden's poem " to the pious memory of Mrs. Anne Killigrew " was entitled by him an Ode , but is generally , and ...
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admiration American art and thought beauty bishop Bruges Budé century character charm civilisation clerical Collins colour criticism culture death delight Eclogues Empire England English English poetry Erasmus essay expression exquisite feel finest France Francesco Sforza FRANCIS YOUNGHUSBAND friends genius grace Gray's Greek hand heart human Indian individual intellectual JUAN LUIS VIVES kind Latin leaders learned Leonardo less letters literary literature living love of country Ludovico il Moro lyric lyrical poetry Master Milan mind modern nature never Paris parish parson passion poems poet poetical poetry portrait preached primitive recognise religion Republic of Letters Rupert Brooke scholar scholarship seems sense sentiment sermons society soul Spain Spanish spirit stanzas surplice tells things touch truth University of Paris Valencia Vasari verse vicar Vives Walt Whitman whole wonder words writing written wrote