Longer English Poems: With Notes, Philological and Explanatory, and an Introduction on the Teaching of English. Chiefly for Use in SchoolsJohn Wesley Hales Macmillan and Company, 1894 - 427 oldal |
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1 - 5 találat összesen 89 találatból.
xiv. oldal
... heart the whole Iliad and Odyssey . " Not that we should servilely follow that method , and commit all Shakspere's poems and plays to memory ; but why should our poet not have his proper place in our schools ? There is room for him and ...
... heart the whole Iliad and Odyssey . " Not that we should servilely follow that method , and commit all Shakspere's poems and plays to memory ; but why should our poet not have his proper place in our schools ? There is room for him and ...
xviii. oldal
... heart . This should be made a necessary part of the out - school work — of “ preparation . " While , as has been said above , something more than the memory is to be thought of , and a mere loading of that faculty is before all things ...
... heart . This should be made a necessary part of the out - school work — of “ preparation . " While , as has been said above , something more than the memory is to be thought of , and a mere loading of that faculty is before all things ...
xxxi. oldal
... heart ? Has one always re- garded them as natural and spontaneous forms of speech that at a later period were to be classified and labelied by the Priscians and Quintilians ? For the words logic , syllogism , premiss , & c . some such ...
... heart ? Has one always re- garded them as natural and spontaneous forms of speech that at a later period were to be classified and labelied by the Priscians and Quintilians ? For the words logic , syllogism , premiss , & c . some such ...
3. oldal
... hearts content " Of your loues couplement ; 66 " And let faire Venus , that is Queene of loue , " With her heart - quelling Sonne vpon you smile , " Whose smile , they say , hath vertue to remoue " All Loues dislike , and friendships ...
... hearts content " Of your loues couplement ; 66 " And let faire Venus , that is Queene of loue , " With her heart - quelling Sonne vpon you smile , " Whose smile , they say , hath vertue to remoue " All Loues dislike , and friendships ...
9. oldal
... hearts and ears did greet As never was by mortall finger strook , Divinely warbled voice Answering the stringed noise , As all their souls in blissfull rapture took ; The air , such pleasure loth to lose , With thousand echo's still ...
... hearts and ears did greet As never was by mortall finger strook , Divinely warbled voice Answering the stringed noise , As all their souls in blissfull rapture took ; The air , such pleasure loth to lose , With thousand echo's still ...
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Adonais Æneid apud Johnson Burns called century chap charms Chaucer cognate common Comp Cowper death Dict doth Dream Dryden Dunciad earth Elegy English eyes Faerie Queene fair favourite force French Gloss Gray Gray's Greek Hamlet hath hear heart heaven Henry Hist Hymn Nat Il Penseroso Iliad Jamieson Julius Cæsar King King Lear L'Alleg L'Allegro ladies language Latin lived London Lord Lycid meaning meant Merchant of Venice Midsummer Night's Dream Milton Muse never night o'er Ovid Paradise Lost Paradise Regained passim Penseroso perhaps phrase Piers Ploughman poem poet poetical poetry Pope pride Prothal quotes reign Richard II round scarcely seems sense sentence Shakspere Shakspere's sing smile song soul sound speaks Spenser spirit stanza sweet tale thee thou thought Twas verb Virg voice Warton wings word writes