Handbook of Universal Literature from the Best and Latest AuthoritiesHoughton, Mifflin, 1902 - 562 strani |
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Æneid ancient appeared ballads beauty became celebrated character Charlemagne chiefly chivalry Christian chronicles church classical comedy contemporary court criticism cultivated dialect distinguished doctrines drama early eighteenth century elegance eloquence eminent England English epic epic poetry Europe feeling fiction fifteenth France French genius German German language Goethe Greece Greek heroes historians human imagination imitation influence Italian Italy king language Latin learning letters litera literary literature Lope de Vega lyric lyric poetry mind Minnesingers modern moral narrative native nature novels Odin original passion period philosophy poems poet poetical poetry Polish language Polish literature political popular principal produced prose Provençal Reformation reign religion religious remarkable romances satire sentiment sixteenth century Slavic Slavic Language songs Spain Spanish Spanish literature spirit style Suabian Swedish literature taste thought tion tongue tragedy translated trouvères ture verse writers written wrote
Priljubljeni odlomki
Stran 477 - My name and memory I leave to foreign nations, and to mine own countrymen, AFTER SOME TIME BE PAST OVER.
Stran 524 - Thus, while it is true on one level of mind that there is nothing in the intellect that was not first in the senses, it is not necessarily true for both levels.
Stran 54 - Minor Prophets: HOSEA, JOEL, AMOS, OBADIAH, JONAH, MICAH, NAHUM, HABAKKUK, ZEPHANIAH, HAGGAI, ZECHARIAH, and MALACHI...
Stran 324 - Sancho are thus brought before us, like such living realities, that at this moment the figures of the crazed, gaunt, dignified knight, and of his round, selfish, and most amusing esquire, dwell bodied forth in the imaginations of more, among all conditions of men throughout Christendom, than any other of the creations of human talent.
Stran 42 - Persia; their fundamental tenets are, that nothing exists absolutely but God ; that the human soul is an emanation from His essence, and though divided for a time from its heavenly source, will be finally reunited with it...
Stran 165 - It is customary with me to refer to you, my lord, matters about which I entertain a doubt. For who is better able either to rule my hesitation, or to instruct my ignorance? I have never been present at the inquiries about the Christians, and, therefore, cannot say for what crime, or to what extent, they are usually punished, or what is the nature of the inquiry about them. Nor have I been free from great doubts whether there should not be a distinction between ages, or how far those of a tender frame...
Stran 94 - ... originated in the choruses of these satyrs. The desire of escaping from self, into something new and strange, of living in an imaginary world, breaks forth in a thousand instances in these festivals of Bacchus.
Stran 514 - ... the first man of the world during the second quarter of the 18th century, and as a theologian, Dr. Chalmers and Robert Hall declare him to have been the greatest in all Christian ages.
Stran 189 - Some of them are to be met with in our old tableaux, in Boccaccio, and in Ariosto; and these very tales which have charmed our Infancy, passing from tongue to tongue and from nation to nation, through channels frequently unknown, are now familiar to the memory, and form the delight of the imagination of half the inhabitants of the globe.
Stran 346 - possesses merits not dissimilar from those of the Iliad, and will claim its place as the fifth national epic of the world, side by side with the Ionian songs, with the Mahdbharata, the Shahndmeh, and the Nibelunge.