Essays by Divers Hands: Being the Transactions of the Royal Society of Literature, Band 1 |
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Seite v
... whole . This is certainly the case with the addresses contained in the present volume . They are diverse because they are the product of diverse minds , but they have a unity because they represent the definite activities for which our ...
... whole . This is certainly the case with the addresses contained in the present volume . They are diverse because they are the product of diverse minds , but they have a unity because they represent the definite activities for which our ...
Seite vi
... whole garden of the eighteenth century . We are led by curious little by - paths which we should not have found for ourselves , and come at every turn upon lyrical poets , from Herrick to Gray and from Blake to Matthew Arnold . Dr ...
... whole garden of the eighteenth century . We are led by curious little by - paths which we should not have found for ourselves , and come at every turn upon lyrical poets , from Herrick to Gray and from Blake to Matthew Arnold . Dr ...
Seite viii
... whole number of Academicians , ' were present , " with great content and admiration . " The lecturer , his learning , and his tutelary swarm of bees , became a legend in Oxford , and if his fame has , in later years , been almost ...
... whole number of Academicians , ' were present , " with great content and admiration . " The lecturer , his learning , and his tutelary swarm of bees , became a legend in Oxford , and if his fame has , in later years , been almost ...
Seite x
... whole and a belief in its essential goodness . The writer's valuation of the elements of human life is , of course , no new one - it is implied in the very existence of our Society , and , by a second coinci- dence , Prof. Foster Watson ...
... whole and a belief in its essential goodness . The writer's valuation of the elements of human life is , of course , no new one - it is implied in the very existence of our Society , and , by a second coinci- dence , Prof. Foster Watson ...
Seite 13
... whole sixty lines of the ode are hopelessly mannered , and the manner is hope- lessly bad . If it were the first that Gray's eye lighted on , one can quite understand how it should have prejudiced him against the whole volume . 1 But on ...
... whole sixty lines of the ode are hopelessly mannered , and the manner is hope- lessly bad . If it were the first that Gray's eye lighted on , one can quite understand how it should have prejudiced him against the whole volume . 1 But on ...
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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