A Text-book on English Literature: With Copious Extracts from the Leading Authors, English and American, with Full Instructions as to the Method in which These are to be Studied, Adapted for Use in Colleges, High Schools and AcademiesClark & Maynard, 1882 - 478 sider |
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Side 138
... Sejanus , and shortly after produced three splendid comedies in James I.'s reign , Volpone the Fox , The Silent Woman , and The Alchemist , 1605-9-10 . The first is the finest thing he ever did , as great in power as it is in the ...
... Sejanus , and shortly after produced three splendid comedies in James I.'s reign , Volpone the Fox , The Silent Woman , and The Alchemist , 1605-9-10 . The first is the finest thing he ever did , as great in power as it is in the ...
Side 139
... Sejanus . * Enter Arruntius . Arr . Still dost thou suffer , heaven ! will no flame , No heat of sin make thy just wrath to boil In thy distemper'd bosom , and o'erflow The pitchy blazes of impiety Kindled beneath thy throne ? Still ...
... Sejanus . * Enter Arruntius . Arr . Still dost thou suffer , heaven ! will no flame , No heat of sin make thy just wrath to boil In thy distemper'd bosom , and o'erflow The pitchy blazes of impiety Kindled beneath thy throne ? Still ...
Side 140
... Sejanus ? Yes , I must If I speak out . ' Tis hard that . May I think And not be rack'd ? What danger is't to dream , Talk in one's sleep , or cough ? Who knows the law ? May I shake my head without a comment ? say It rains or it holds ...
... Sejanus ? Yes , I must If I speak out . ' Tis hard that . May I think And not be rack'd ? What danger is't to dream , Talk in one's sleep , or cough ? Who knows the law ? May I shake my head without a comment ? say It rains or it holds ...
Side 141
... Sejanus . Nothing hath privilege ' gainst the violent ear . No place , no day , no hour , we see , is free , Not our religious and most sacred times , From some one kind of cruelty ; all matter , Nay , all occasion pleaseth . Madmen's ...
... Sejanus . Nothing hath privilege ' gainst the violent ear . No place , no day , no hour , we see , is free , Not our religious and most sacred times , From some one kind of cruelty ; all matter , Nay , all occasion pleaseth . Madmen's ...
Side 142
... Sejanus ' footing . These cross points Of varying letters and opposing consuls , Mingling his honors and his punishments , Feigning now ill , now well , raising Sejanus And then depressing him , as now of late In all reports we have it ...
... Sejanus ' footing . These cross points Of varying letters and opposing consuls , Mingling his honors and his punishments , Feigning now ill , now well , raising Sejanus And then depressing him , as now of late In all reports we have it ...
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Almindelige termer og sætninger
ballads beauty began Ben Jonson Beowulf Cædmon called Canterbury Tales century characters Chaucer Church criticism death delight drama Edward III Elizabethan England English literature English poetry English prose Essays eyes Faerie Queen feeling French genius GEORGE GASCOIGNE Greek hath heart Henry Henry VIII human humor imitated influence John king language Latin Layamon learning LESSON light lish literary lived look Lord Milton mind moral nature never noble Ormulum Paradise Lost passion plays pleasure poem poetic poets political Pope Puritan Quar Queen reign religion religious Roman satire scenery Scotland Scottish Sejanus Shakespeare songs sonnets soul Spenser spirit story style sweet thee things thou thought tion tongue took translation truth unto verse Ward's Anthology whole William William Minto words writing written wrote