effort to break up the absurd taste of his time for the fancies of chivalry than as anything of more serious import, has been established by an uninterrupted, and, it may be said, an unquestioned, success ever since, both as the oldest classical specimen... History of Spanish Literature - Stran 151avtor: George Ticknor - 1891Celotni ogled - O knjigi
| Jared Sparks, Edward Everett, James Russell Lowell, Henry Cabot Lodge - 1850 - 634 strani
...romance which he threw so carelessly from him, and which, I am persuaded, he regarded rather as a bold effort to break up the absurd taste of his time for the fancies of chivalry than as any thing of more serious import, has been established by an uninterrupted,and, it may be said, an... | |
| Francis Bowen - 1850 - 738 strani
...romance which he threw so carelessly from him, and which, I am persuaded, he regarded rather as a bold effort to break up the absurd taste of his time for the fancies of chivalry than as any thing of more serious import, has been established by an uninterrupted, and, it may be said, an... | |
| George Ticknor - 1854 - 590 strani
...however, which he threw so carelessly from him, and which, I am persuaded, he regarded rather as a bold effort to break up the absurd taste of his time for the fancies of chivalry than as any thing of more serious import, has been established by an uninterrupted, and, it may be said, an... | |
| Evert Augustus Duyckinck, George Long Duyckinck - 1856 - 838 strani
...bold effort to break up the absurd taste of hi» time for the fancies of chivalry than as any thing of more serious import, has been established by an uninterrupted, and, it may be said, on unquestioned, success ever since, both as the oldest classical specimen of romantic fiction, and... | |
| Anne Charlotte Lynch Botta - 1860 - 592 strani
...fancies of chivalry, has been established by an uninterrupted and an unquestioned success ever since, as the oldest classical specimen of romantic fiction, and as one of the most remarkable monuments of modern genius. But Cervantes is entitled to a higher glory : it should be borne in mind... | |
| Anne Charlotte Lynch Botta - 1863 - 764 strani
...fancies of chivalry, has been established by an uninterrupted and an unquestioned success ever since, as the oldest classical specimen of romantic fiction, and as one of the most remarkable monuments of modern genius. But Cervantes is entitled to a higher glory : it should be borne in mind... | |
| George Ticknor - 1864 - 544 strani
...up the absurd taste of the r Don° his time for the fancies of chivalry than as anyQumjte. tìàng of more serious import, has been established by an...romantic fiction, and as one of the most remarkable monuments of modern genius. But though this may be enough to fill the measure of human fame and glory,... | |
| William Hickling Prescott - 1864 - 758 strani
...romance which he threw so carelessly from him, and which, I am persuaded, he regarded rather as a bold effort to break up the absurd taste of his time for the fancies of chivalry than as any thing of more serious import, has been established by an uninterrupted, and, it may be said, an... | |
| William Hickling Prescott - 1864 - 758 strani
...romance which he threw so carelessly from him, and which, I am persuaded, he regard-ed rather as a bold effort to break up the absurd taste of his time for the fancies of chivalry than as any thing of more serious import, has been es-tablished by an uninterrupted, and, it may be said, an... | |
| William Hickling Prescott - 1864 - 780 strani
...romance which he threw so carelessly from him, and which, I am persuaded, he regarded rather as a bold effort to break up the absurd taste of his time for the fancies of chivalry than as any thing of more serious import, has been established by an uninterrupted, and, it may be said, an... | |
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