Periods of European Literature, Volume 1W. Blackwood, 1904 |
No interior do livro
Resultados 1-5 de 28
Página 6
... beginning of modern literature . With hardly a warning came the rhymes of William , Count of Poitou , the first of a school that includes every modern poet . Everything that is commonly called poetry in the modern tongues may in some ...
... beginning of modern literature . With hardly a warning came the rhymes of William , Count of Poitou , the first of a school that includes every modern poet . Everything that is commonly called poetry in the modern tongues may in some ...
Página 7
... beginning of French and Provençal , —which is also the beginning of Spanish and Italian , and a fresh opening for English and German poetry , -while it is a term from which to reckon the life of a new world , is no less decisively the ...
... beginning of French and Provençal , —which is also the beginning of Spanish and Italian , and a fresh opening for English and German poetry , -while it is a term from which to reckon the life of a new world , is no less decisively the ...
Página 8
... beginning may have been . Their end is marked by the appear- ance of the new Romance languages and their poetry , which take captive the Teutonic countries , and destroy the chances of the old Teutonic manner of composing verse . The ...
... beginning may have been . Their end is marked by the appear- ance of the new Romance languages and their poetry , which take captive the Teutonic countries , and destroy the chances of the old Teutonic manner of composing verse . The ...
Página 10
... beginning of the next period . But the Latin literature descends without a break from classical times , and it lasts for centuries after the old German tongues have been forgotten . The Teutonic nations brought new languages and new ...
... beginning of the next period . But the Latin literature descends without a break from classical times , and it lasts for centuries after the old German tongues have been forgotten . The Teutonic nations brought new languages and new ...
Página 28
... beginning of the Reformation is often illus- trated , as it was by the Reformers themselves , with a contrast between the absurd allegorical commentaries of the old school and the rational single - minded inter- pretation of the text ...
... beginning of the Reformation is often illus- trated , as it was by the Reformers themselves , with a contrast between the absurd allegorical commentaries of the old school and the rational single - minded inter- pretation of the text ...
Palavras e frases frequentes
Adamnan adventures Alcuin Aldhelm allegory alliterative ancient Anglo-Saxon authors ballad battle Bede belongs Beowulf Bishop Boethius called Cassiodorus Celtic character Charlemagne classical common Court Cynewulf Dante Dark Ages dialogue Einhard Ekkehard Elder Edda epic poetry Ermoldus extant favourite Fortunatus French epic Froissart genius gives gods Gothic grammar Greek Gregory of Tours Hávamál Helgi hero heroic Hildebrand historians Homer honour Hrungnir Icelandic imagination Irish kind king language later Latin Latin verse learning legend less literary literature Liutprand Lombard lyrical Martianus Capella medieval Middle Ages mind modern motives myth mythology narrative ninth century Northern Notker Odin old English original phrases poem poetical poets popular prose rhetoric rhymes Roland romance Sagas Saxon Sigrun Sigurd song sort spirit St Gall stanzas story style syllables taste Teutonic themes things Thor thou tion tongues tradition translated Tuotilo Volospá Waltharius Welsh words writing wrote
Passagens conhecidas
Página ii - Europe as being, for intellectual and spiritual purposes, one great confederation, bound to a joint action and working to a common result; and whose members have, for their proper outfit, a knowledge of Greek, Roman, and Eastern antiquity, and of one another.
Página 338 - And if it should be said that there was a porter at Arthur's palace, there was none. Glewlwyd Gavaelvawr was there, acting as porter, to welcome guests and strangers, and to receive them with honour...
Página 19 - Methinks we should not so soon yield our consents captive to the authority of antiquity, unless we saw more reason ; all our understandings are not to be built by the square of Greece and Italy. We are the children of nature as well as they ; we are not so placed out of the way of judgement, but that the same sun of discretion shineth upon us ; we have our portion of the same virtues as well as of the same vices : Et Catilinam quocunque in populo videas, quocunque sub axe.
Página 226 - Die illi nunc de me corde fideli Tantundem liebes, veniat quantum modo loubes, Et volucrum wunna quot sint, tot die sibi minna, Graminis et florum quantum sit, die et honorum.
Página 213 - O Roma nobilis, orbis et domina, Cunctarum urbium excellentissima, Roseo martyrum sanguine rubea, Albis et virginum liliis candida: Salutem dicimus tibi per omnia Te benedicimus, salve per saecula.
Página 19 - Longobards, whose coming down like an inundation overwhelmed, as they say, all the glory of learning in Europe, have yet left us still their laws and customs, as the originals of most of the provincial constitutions of Christendom ; which well considered with their other courses of government, may serve to clear them from this imputation of ignorance. And though the vanquished never...
Página 109 - A man to join himself with th' Universe In his main sway, and make in all things fit One with that All, and go on, round as it; Not plucking from the whole his wretched part, And into straits, or into nought revert, Wishing the complete Universe might be Subject to such a rag of it as he...