English Literature Through the Ages: Beowulf to StevensonG.G. Harrap & Company, 1925 - 591 Seiten |
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Seite 26
... brought with them something more than the doctrines of Christianity . They brought the fire , enthusiasm , and passion which at that time distinguished the Celtic Church ; they brought the ardent love of learning which seemed in those ...
... brought with them something more than the doctrines of Christianity . They brought the fire , enthusiasm , and passion which at that time distinguished the Celtic Church ; they brought the ardent love of learning which seemed in those ...
Seite 100
... brought back to their own country a know- ledge of Greek literature , and all the wonderful new ideas that such knowledge had given them . So began the Renaissance in England . But its progress was slow . The small band of scholars ...
... brought back to their own country a know- ledge of Greek literature , and all the wonderful new ideas that such knowledge had given them . So began the Renaissance in England . But its progress was slow . The small band of scholars ...
Seite 278
... brought an essay On Immortality , of which the main theme was " the progress of a finite spirit to perfec- tion . " So , for one day , the history of Sir Roger was inter- rupted , only to begin again on Monday with one of the most ...
... brought an essay On Immortality , of which the main theme was " the progress of a finite spirit to perfec- tion . " So , for one day , the history of Sir Roger was inter- rupted , only to begin again on Monday with one of the most ...
Inhalt
BOOK | 15 |
CÆDMONS PARAPHRASE | 26 |
THE EXETER BOOK | 33 |
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Addison beautiful became began Ben Jonson Beowulf brother brought Cædmon called Canterbury Tales Carlyle century CHAPTER Charles Charles Dickens Charles Lamb Charlotte Brontë Chaucer Church Coleridge Cowper Craigenputtock Cynewulf daughter Dean Prior death delight Dickens died early Elizabethan England English Euphues Exeter Book eyes Faerie Queene famous Fanny Fanny Burney fashion father friends gave Gawayne George Eliot give heart John Johnson Keats King lady learning letters literary literature lived London looked Lord Matthew Arnold Matthew Paris Milton mind nature never night novel passed passion play poem poet poetry poor Pope probably published Queen quiet readers says seems Shakespeare Shelley sister soon Spenser spirit story sweet Swift Tatler tells Tennyson things thou thought tion told took verse wife wonderful words Wordsworth write written wrote young