An Oxford Anthology of English ProseArnold Whitridge, John Wendell Dodds, Howard Foster Lowry Oxford University Press, 1935 - 950 من الصفحات |
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الصفحة 179
... write a regular French play , or more difficult than to write an irregular Eng- lish one , like those of Fletcher , or of Shakspeare ? ' If they content themselves , as Corneille did , with some flat design , which , like an ill riddle ...
... write a regular French play , or more difficult than to write an irregular Eng- lish one , like those of Fletcher , or of Shakspeare ? ' If they content themselves , as Corneille did , with some flat design , which , like an ill riddle ...
الصفحة 190
... write in verse was proper for serious plays . Which supposition being granted ( as it was briefly made out in that ... write scurvily out of rhyme , and worse in it . But the first of these judgments is nowhere to be found , and the ...
... write in verse was proper for serious plays . Which supposition being granted ( as it was briefly made out in that ... write scurvily out of rhyme , and worse in it . But the first of these judgments is nowhere to be found , and the ...
الصفحة 807
... writing an account of himself as a thing which could be put upon him to do whatever circumstances might be taken in . But the good bishop lived in an age when a man might write books and be yet per- mitted to keep his private existence ...
... writing an account of himself as a thing which could be put upon him to do whatever circumstances might be taken in . But the good bishop lived in an age when a man might write books and be yet per- mitted to keep his private existence ...
المحتوى
Le Morte Darthur | 1 |
Roger Ascham 15151568 | 19 |
Sir Thomas North | 29 |
حقوق النشر | |
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عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
admiration appear Aristotle beauty Ben Jonson better blank verse Boswell called Catharine character Chaucer death divine doth England English eral eyes feelings French give ground Guenever hand hath hear heard heart heaven honour hope human imagination Johnson Julius Cæsar kind King King Arthur knowledge labour ladies language learning Leofric liberty live look Lord man's manner matter means ment mind Mirabeau nature ness never night noble observed opinion Ovid passed passion person philosopher Plato play pleasure poem poet poetry poor prince reader reason rhyme scene seems sense Sir Bedivere Sir Ector Sir Launcelot Sir Lucan Sir Mordred soul speak spirit talk tell thee things thou thought tion told true truth unto verse virtue Voltaire whole words write