The English Poets: Chaucer to DonneThomas Humphry Ward Macmillan, 1893 |
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Strana vi
... writings as should fully represent the great poets , and at the same time to omit no one who is poetically considerable . There are writers who were famous in their day and who played a great part in the history of English literature ...
... writings as should fully represent the great poets , and at the same time to omit no one who is poetically considerable . There are writers who were famous in their day and who played a great part in the history of English literature ...
Strana xxxvii
... writing : ' And long it was not after , when I was confirmed in this opinion , that he , who would not be frustrate of his hope to write well hereafter in laudable things , ought himself to be a true poem , ' - we pro- nounce that such ...
... writing : ' And long it was not after , when I was confirmed in this opinion , that he , who would not be frustrate of his hope to write well hereafter in laudable things , ought himself to be a true poem , ' - we pro- nounce that such ...
Strana 4
... suppo- sition ; but what is more to the point is that the context sho vs Horace to be writing about a third person . Besides , it is not certain that Chaucer had read Horace . No ' long study and great love ' had made THE ENGLISH POETS .
... suppo- sition ; but what is more to the point is that the context sho vs Horace to be writing about a third person . Besides , it is not certain that Chaucer had read Horace . No ' long study and great love ' had made THE ENGLISH POETS .
Strana 6
... writings up to 1372 ( the date of his first visit to Italy ) are either translations or imitations , more or less close , of French poems ; and even after he had returned , impressed with the ineffaceable charm of Italy , he still ...
... writings up to 1372 ( the date of his first visit to Italy ) are either translations or imitations , more or less close , of French poems ; and even after he had returned , impressed with the ineffaceable charm of Italy , he still ...
Strana 7
... writings the passage of that poem that we are able to quote ; but the question is one which , as far as Chaucer's debt to French literature is concerned , is of little importance . Translate the Romaunt he certainly did , and the ...
... writings the passage of that poem that we are able to quote ; but the question is one which , as far as Chaucer's debt to French literature is concerned , is of little importance . Translate the Romaunt he certainly did , and the ...
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Aeneid Astrophel and Stella ballads beauty behold Caelica Canterbury Tales Chaucer Clerk Saunders dead death delight doth drede Edom England's Helicon English eyes Faery Faery Queen fair fayre flour flowers Glasgerion gold grace grene gret gude hand hart hast hath heart heaven herte hire honour king lady live Lord lovers Lydgate Marlowe mede mind mony myght never night nocht nought passion Petrarch poem poet poetical poetry praise Queen Quhat Quhen quhilk quod quoth rich Robin Robin Hood sall sche Scotch seyde Shakespeare shal Sidney Sidney's sigh sight sing song sonnets sorrow sorwe Spenser sweet swete swich Tamburlaine thair thay thee ther thing thou thought thow Timor Mortis conturbat Troylus true truth tyme unto Venus Venus and Adonis verse whan wight wolde words writings