An Oxford Anthology of English ProseArnold Whitridge, John Wendell Dodds, Howard Foster Lowry Oxford University Press, 1935 - 950 pages |
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Page 185
... sense naturally , and the due placing them adapts the rhyme to it . If you object that one verse may be made for the sake of another , though both the words and rhyme be apt , I answer , it can- not possibly so fall out ; for either ...
... sense naturally , and the due placing them adapts the rhyme to it . If you object that one verse may be made for the sake of another , though both the words and rhyme be apt , I answer , it can- not possibly so fall out ; for either ...
Page 768
... sense of creative activity ; a sense which a man of insight and conscience will prefer to what he might derive from a poor , starved , fragmentary , inadequate creation . And at some epochs no other creation is pos- sible . Still , in ...
... sense of creative activity ; a sense which a man of insight and conscience will prefer to what he might derive from a poor , starved , fragmentary , inadequate creation . And at some epochs no other creation is pos- sible . Still , in ...
Page 924
... sense of shape . Even if that sense of shape be only a glorification of the shapeless , it is still there , and beyond it character will not set foot . The case of Bazarov , already quoted , serves to illustrate also the extremely inti ...
... sense of shape . Even if that sense of shape be only a glorification of the shapeless , it is still there , and beyond it character will not set foot . The case of Bazarov , already quoted , serves to illustrate also the extremely inti ...
Contents
Le Morte Darthur | 1 |
Roger Ascham 15151568 | 19 |
Sir Thomas North | 29 |
Copyright | |
46 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
admiration appear Aristotle beauty Ben Jonson better blank verse Boswell called Catharine character Chaucer death divine doth England English eral eyes feelings French give ground Guenever hand hath hear heard heart heaven honour hope human imagination Johnson Julius Cæsar kind King King Arthur knowledge labour ladies language learning Leofric liberty live look Lord man's manner matter means ment mind Mirabeau nature ness never night noble observed opinion Ovid passed passion person philosopher Plato play pleasure poem poet poetry poor prince reader reason rhyme scene seems sense Sir Bedivere Sir Ector Sir Launcelot Sir Lucan Sir Mordred soul speak spirit talk tell thee things thou thought tion told true truth unto verse virtue Voltaire whole words write