The History of English Poetry: From the Close of the Eleventh to the Commencement of the Eighteenth Century, כרך 1T. Tegg, 1824 - 482 עמודים |
מתוך הספר
תוצאות 6-10 מתוך 100
עמוד 29
... present day , a small island near the harbour of Corfu , claims the honour of being the original bark . In the same way many incidents in the Ar- gonautica received a " local habitation . " According to Timonax , Jason and Me- dea were ...
... present day , a small island near the harbour of Corfu , claims the honour of being the original bark . In the same way many incidents in the Ar- gonautica received a " local habitation . " According to Timonax , Jason and Me- dea were ...
עמוד 30
... present us with a counterpart to individual opinion . The sinking energies of increasing age , like the dimness of enfee- bled vision , have a constant tendency to deprive passing events of their natural sharpness of outline , and the ...
... present us with a counterpart to individual opinion . The sinking energies of increasing age , like the dimness of enfee- bled vision , have a constant tendency to deprive passing events of their natural sharpness of outline , and the ...
עמוד 31
... present is doomed to suffer by an unjust and degrading contrast . Thus also in the lengthened vista of popular tradition , every thing which is shrouded in the obscurity of a distant age , is made to partake of those physical and ...
... present is doomed to suffer by an unjust and degrading contrast . Thus also in the lengthened vista of popular tradition , every thing which is shrouded in the obscurity of a distant age , is made to partake of those physical and ...
עמוד 33
... present , than that words neither have been nor are now invented ; but that they always have been compounded from existing roots in the dialect requiring them , or borrowed from some collateral source ; and for this very obvious reason ...
... present , than that words neither have been nor are now invented ; but that they always have been compounded from existing roots in the dialect requiring them , or borrowed from some collateral source ; and for this very obvious reason ...
עמוד 44
... present he wants leisure to satisfy . The French term for our fairy or fay is fée ; and , like the Italian fata , is said to be derived from fatua . " Faerie " was a general name for an illusion ; a sense in which it is always used by ...
... present he wants leisure to satisfy . The French term for our fairy or fay is fée ; and , like the Italian fata , is said to be derived from fatua . " Faerie " was a general name for an illusion ; a sense in which it is always used by ...
מהדורות אחרות - הצג הכל
מונחים וביטויים נפוצים
afterwards Anglo-Saxon antient appears apud Arabian Armorica Arthur bards Bede Beowulf Bibl bishop Bodl Bodleian library Brit British Britons Brunne called century CHAP Charlemagne Chaucer Chron chronicle cited dæmon Dares Phrygius Dictys Cretensis Du Cange Edda edit England English fable fiction France Geoffrey of Monmouth GESTA GESTA ROMANORUM Graal Greek Harl Henry hero Hist historian holy ibid infr king king Arthur knight kyng language Latin learned Leland londe manuscript ment mentioned metrical minstrels monastery monk Norman northern Odin original Paris passage piece poem poet poetry popular printed probably prose reign rhyme Richard Ritson Robert Saint Saracens Saxon says Script sone song story supposed tale ther thou tion translated ubi supr verse Vincent of Beauvais Warton Welsh William of Malmesbury writer written wrote