Literary Masters of EnglandNelson Sherwin Bushnell, Paul Milton Fulcher, Warner Taylor |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 77
Page 417
... common grammar or common 50 5 words , invented by some pretty fellows , such. satire at last fell upon the sun , whom they all agreed to be very troublesome , imperti- nent and inquisitive . Upon which , the sun , who overheard them ...
... common grammar or common 50 5 words , invented by some pretty fellows , such. satire at last fell upon the sun , whom they all agreed to be very troublesome , imperti- nent and inquisitive . Upon which , the sun , who overheard them ...
Page 593
... common forms of business appears to us rather as an apology to cover a supine neglect of duty , than the means of performing it in a manner adequate to the exigency that presses upon us . The common means we have already tried , and ...
... common forms of business appears to us rather as an apology to cover a supine neglect of duty , than the means of performing it in a manner adequate to the exigency that presses upon us . The common means we have already tried , and ...
Page 736
... common language of the learned class only by the superior number and nov- elty of the thoughts and relations which they had to convey . The language of Al- gernon Sidney 3 differs not at all from that which every well - educated ...
... common language of the learned class only by the superior number and nov- elty of the thoughts and relations which they had to convey . The language of Al- gernon Sidney 3 differs not at all from that which every well - educated ...
Contents
viii | 27 |
Beowulf omitting XXVIIXLIII Wil | 48 |
The Popular Ballad | 55 |
Copyright | |
30 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Addison anon arms Beowulf better bold Calidore called century church coude court dead death doth Ecgtheow England English envy eyes fair father fear French Geat grace Grendel ground Guenever hand hath haue head heart Heaven Hengest Heorot honour Hrothgar Hygelac King Arthur knight Lady land learned live London look Lord loue Lucan the Butler man's ment mind nature never noble o'er passed persons pleasure poem poet praise princes Queen rich Roman Scyldings seyde shal sing Sir Bedivere Sir Ector Sir Launcelot Sir Lucan Sir Mordred slain song soul spirit sweet swich sword tell thee ther things thou thought tion took truth Unferth unto verse virtue vnto whan Whig wise wolde words ΙΟ