A History of English Literature |
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Page 100
... sense , they but in clothes . The Atheist's Tragedy ( 1611 ) is less successful . Again the play's structure derives from the Morality tradition , which did not altogether suit the demands of the more naturalistic Jacobean stage ...
... sense , they but in clothes . The Atheist's Tragedy ( 1611 ) is less successful . Again the play's structure derives from the Morality tradition , which did not altogether suit the demands of the more naturalistic Jacobean stage ...
Page 172
... sense ' that gives us an intuitive ability to recognize virtue , this faculty being merely an extension of the aesthetic sense ; with the result that good taste and virtue are inextricably connected . Shaftesbury endeavoured to refute ...
... sense ' that gives us an intuitive ability to recognize virtue , this faculty being merely an extension of the aesthetic sense ; with the result that good taste and virtue are inextricably connected . Shaftesbury endeavoured to refute ...
Page 328
... Sense and Sensibility and Northanger Abbey between 1797 and 1798. The publisher to whom she submitted Pride and Prejudice immediately rejected it ; and , although Northanger Abbey was purchased for £ 10 , the bookseller to whom she had ...
... Sense and Sensibility and Northanger Abbey between 1797 and 1798. The publisher to whom she submitted Pride and Prejudice immediately rejected it ; and , although Northanger Abbey was purchased for £ 10 , the bookseller to whom she had ...
Contents
Preface | 7 |
The Age of Chaucer | 16 |
The English Renaissance 335 | 35 |
Copyright | |
6 other sections not shown
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Common terms and phrases
admired afterwards Alexander Pope appeared artist beauty became Ben Jonson born Byron Cambridge century character Charles Chaucer Church Coleridge comedy contemporary critic D.H. Lawrence Danny Deever death delight described despite died dramatic dramatist Dryden E. M. Forster early Elizabethan England English essays eyes famous father followed genius George George Eliot gift heart Henry human imaginative John John Donne John Dryden Johnson Joshua Reynolds King Lady later learned literary literature lived London Lord marriage married modern moral nature never novel novelist once Oxford passion play poem poet poetic poetry political Pope portrait produced prose published Queen returned romantic Samuel Johnson satire seems Shakespeare Shelley sonnets soon spirit story strange style success T.S. Eliot Tamburlaine thee theme Thomas thou tragedy verse Victorian Westminster School wife William woman Wordsworth writing written wrote young youth
References to this book
Jonathan Swift and Popular Culture: Myth, Media, and the Man Ann Cline Kelly No preview available - 2002 |