Readings in English Literature: From Chaucer to Matthew ArnoldGerald Bullett A. & C. Black, 1945 - 250 Seiten |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 18
Seite 8
... prose , but a prose for the most part as formless and prolix as his verse is vivid , witty , and well - wrought . In general , prose was used only for didactic works , theological treatises , and the like ; and such things were still ...
... prose , but a prose for the most part as formless and prolix as his verse is vivid , witty , and well - wrought . In general , prose was used only for didactic works , theological treatises , and the like ; and such things were still ...
Seite 81
... prose , a medium flexible enough to serve all the diverse purposes to which prose may be put , from logical analysis and pedestrian narrative to impassioned rhetoric . Such a prose had to be established sooner or later if the essays of ...
... prose , a medium flexible enough to serve all the diverse purposes to which prose may be put , from logical analysis and pedestrian narrative to impassioned rhetoric . Such a prose had to be established sooner or later if the essays of ...
Seite 90
... prose . He did not do so partly because , as we have seen , there was no English prose form ready to his hand . His Italian contemporary Boccaccio , having a long- established language for his instrument , wrote equally in prose and ...
... prose . He did not do so partly because , as we have seen , there was no English prose form ready to his hand . His Italian contemporary Boccaccio , having a long- established language for his instrument , wrote equally in prose and ...
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Adams Afrasiab Arethuse BANQUO beauty birds breast breath bright Chaucer cloud cold cried dark dead dear death deep delight doth dream earth end my song euphuism Excalibur eyes fair fame father fear flowers GERALD BULLETT give green Gudurz hand happy hath hear heard heart Heaven Jane Austen Johnson King Arthur LADY MACBETH light live look lord lute Lycidas mind moon never night noble o'er OBERON Oxus Persian pleasure poem poet poetry Porphyro pray prose rose round Rustum sand seem'd Seistan Shakespeare sight sing Sir Bedivere Sir Lucan Sir Walter Ralegh sleep smile Sohrab soul spear spirit St Agnes stars stood stream Sweet Thames sword Tartar tears tell thee thine things thou art thou hast thought TITANIA Trulliber unto verse voice wife wind wings words young youth