Lectures on English Literature: From Chaucer to TennysonJ.B. Lippincott & Company, 1863 - 387 Seiten |
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Seite xvii
... memory , I may venture at least , this now is my pur- pose - to prepare a Memoir of my brother's gentle and tran- quil life , and very interesting correspondence on both sides . of the Atlantic . The life of a secluded American scholar ...
... memory , I may venture at least , this now is my pur- pose - to prepare a Memoir of my brother's gentle and tran- quil life , and very interesting correspondence on both sides . of the Atlantic . The life of a secluded American scholar ...
Seite xx
... memory he most revered , and whose writings had interwoven themselves with his intellectual and moral being . " I do not know , " he said in one of his letters to his family , " what I have ever done to deserve all this kindness . " And ...
... memory he most revered , and whose writings had interwoven themselves with his intellectual and moral being . " I do not know , " he said in one of his letters to his family , " what I have ever done to deserve all this kindness . " And ...
Seite xxi
... memory of this earth was of beautiful England in her summer garb of verdure . The last words he ever wrote were in a letter of the 20th September to his venerable friend , Mrs. Wordsworth , thanking her and his English friends generally ...
... memory of this earth was of beautiful England in her summer garb of verdure . The last words he ever wrote were in a letter of the 20th September to his venerable friend , Mrs. Wordsworth , thanking her and his English friends generally ...
Seite xxii
... memory , no graceful expression or act of sympathy to his family , was withheld . For them all there are no adequate words of gratitude . Returning with renewed health and refreshed spirits , with a capacity not only for intellectual ...
... memory , no graceful expression or act of sympathy to his family , was withheld . For them all there are no adequate words of gratitude . Returning with renewed health and refreshed spirits , with a capacity not only for intellectual ...
Seite 27
... memory - grate- fully retained as benefits received in the period of in- tellectual immaturity and inexperience . Even the stu- dent of literature whose range of reading is most com- prehensive whose habit of reading is most confirmed ...
... memory - grate- fully retained as benefits received in the period of in- tellectual immaturity and inexperience . Even the stu- dent of literature whose range of reading is most com- prehensive whose habit of reading is most confirmed ...
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admirable beauty Byron century character Charles Lamb Chaucer Christian Cowper criticism dark death deep discipline divine duty earnest earth England English language English literature English poetry expression faculties Faery Queen familiar French Revolution genial genius gentle give glory guage habit happy hath heart honour Horace Walpole human imagination influence intellectual Jeremy Taylor Lady language lecture letters light litera literary living look Lord Lord Byron Lord Chatham memory Milton mind moral nature never Paradise Lost pass passage passion philosophy poem poet poet's poetic racter reading remarkable sacred Saxon Scott sense Shakspeare song sorrow soul sound Southey Southey's speak speech Spenser spirit stanzas style sympathy Tenterden thing thou thought and feeling tion true truth uncon utterance verse wisdom wise wit and humour womanly words Wordsworth writings