Life in English Literature: An Introduction for Beginners, Volumes 1-3Methuen, 1949 - 535 páginas |
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Página 13
... pleasure elsewhere : to make friends with characters who are easier to recognise . Once we have realised that ordinary human feelings and ideas are little changed , we shall have broken down the highest barrier that divides us from ...
... pleasure elsewhere : to make friends with characters who are easier to recognise . Once we have realised that ordinary human feelings and ideas are little changed , we shall have broken down the highest barrier that divides us from ...
Página 64
... pleasure that I find in Plato : Alas good folk , they never felt , what true pleasure meant . And how came you Madam , quoth I , to this deep knowledge of pleasure , and what did chiefly allure you into it : since , not many women , but ...
... pleasure that I find in Plato : Alas good folk , they never felt , what true pleasure meant . And how came you Madam , quoth I , to this deep knowledge of pleasure , and what did chiefly allure you into it : since , not many women , but ...
Página 65
... pleasure , and brings daily to me more pleasure and more , that in respect of it , all other pleasures , in very deed , be but trifles and troubles unto me . I remember this talk gladly , both because it is so worthy of memory , and be ...
... pleasure , and brings daily to me more pleasure and more , that in respect of it , all other pleasures , in very deed , be but trifles and troubles unto me . I remember this talk gladly , both because it is so worthy of memory , and be ...
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Life in English Literature: An Introduction for Beginners, Volumes 1-3 Leonard Alfred George Strong,Monica Redlich Visualização de excertos - 1949 |
Palavras e frases frequentes
Apollyon Ben Jonson Betsey Betsinda Byron called Cavalier poets character CHARLES SURFACE Chaucer CHIEF JUSTICE Coleridge cried dead death Dickens DOGB drink English eyes Faerie Queene fair FALSTAFF father Faustus fear Felpham fire Gamp gentleman give hand happy HARDCASTLE hath head hear heard heart heaven heroic couplet honour HOSTESS humour Johnson JULIET King L. A. G. STRONG lady LEATHERHEAD live London look Lord Majesty MALAPROP Master constable matter mind MOSCA never night once Paston play pleasure poems poet poetry POINS poor Pope pray Prig PRINCE HENRY PUFF Queen Romeo servant Shakespeare Sir Bedivere sleep soul Spenser spirit story sweet Swift talk Tamburlaine tell theatre thee things thou art thought to-day told took Tybalt uncle Toby unto VOLPONE walk wife wind word Wordsworth write wrote young