| George Ticknor - 1849 - 588 strani
...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. The greatest of the great poets — Homer, Dante, Shak speare, Milton — have no doubt risen to loftier... | |
| George Ticknor - 1849 - 550 strani
...his round, selfish, and most amusing esquire dwell bodied forth in the imaginations of more, a:nong all conditions of men throughout Christendom, than any other of the creations of human talent. The greatest of the great poets—Homer, Dante, Shakspeare, Milton—have no doubt risen to loftier... | |
| George Ticknor - 1849 - 582 strani
...instinctively concentrating in his fiction whatever was peculiar to the character of his nation — has shown himself of kindred to all times and all lands ; to the humblest degrees of cultivation as well as to the highest ; and has thus, beyond all other writers, received... | |
| Evert Augustus Duyckinck, George Long Duyckinck - 1856 - 838 strani
...knight, and of hia 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. The greatest of the great poet* — Homer, Dante, Shakespeare, Milton — have no doubt risen to loftier... | |
| Evert Augustus Duyckinck, George Long Duyckinck - 1856 - 808 strani
...his round, selfish, and most amusing esquire, dwell bodied forth in the imaginations of more, arnoi g all conditions of men throughout Christendom, than any other of the creations of human talent The greatest of the great jwets — Homer, Dante, Shakespeare, Milton — have no doubt risen to loftier... | |
| Charles Dexter Cleveland - 1859 - 812 strani
...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. The greatest of the great poets — Homer, Dante, Shakspeare, Milton — have no doubt risen to loftier... | |
| Charles Dexter Cleveland - 1862 - 792 strani
...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. The greatest of the great poets — -Homer, Dante, Shakspeare, Milton — have no doubt risen to loftier... | |
| Charles Dexter Cleveland - 1862 - 796 strani
...knight, and of his round, selfish, and most amusing esquire, dwell bodicd forth in the imaginations of more, among all conditions of men throughout Christendom, than any other of the ereations of human talent. The greatest of the great poets — Homer, Dante, iShakspeare, Milton —... | |
| George Ticknor - 1863 - 536 strani
...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 » Wordsworth, in his " Prelude," Book satire against the Don Quixote, but rather V., says of Don Quixote,... | |
| Charles Dexter Cleveland - 1865 - 798 strani
...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. The greatest of the great poets — Homer, Dante, Shakspeare, Milton — have no doubt risen to loftier... | |
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