Periods of European Literature, Volume 3George Saintsbury William Blackwood, 1923 |
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Página v
... thought that the work was worth accomplishing , were the workman unworthy . It is evident that a book of this sort must depend , in a larger measure than is entirely agreeable , on compilation . The only alternative is to ignore the ...
... thought that the work was worth accomplishing , were the workman unworthy . It is evident that a book of this sort must depend , in a larger measure than is entirely agreeable , on compilation . The only alternative is to ignore the ...
Página vi
... thought and industry with those accepted on authority , though he recognises , with all sensible judges , that only in that way can a work of this kind be satisfactorily carried through . If there be a danger of the author receiving ...
... thought and industry with those accepted on authority , though he recognises , with all sensible judges , that only in that way can a work of this kind be satisfactorily carried through . If there be a danger of the author receiving ...
Página 45
... thought of as members of a race which was now , after centuries of oppression , reassuming its rightful place both at home and in the eyes of the world . The story of Guy of Warwick is closely allied with the legends of Eutachius and ...
... thought of as members of a race which was now , after centuries of oppression , reassuming its rightful place both at home and in the eyes of the world . The story of Guy of Warwick is closely allied with the legends of Eutachius and ...
Página 67
... thought with only a slight variation in the expression . This is best exemplified in a species of verse for which the Portuguese have strictly no name , or , it might be proper to say , no name coextensive with all its possible forms ...
... thought with only a slight variation in the expression . This is best exemplified in a species of verse for which the Portuguese have strictly no name , or , it might be proper to say , no name coextensive with all its possible forms ...
Página 83
... thought " to the sprekers or zeggers who held forth now in the halls of the gentry , now before town - audiences , and they took to relating such tales for their own sakes . The tales , always in verse , are of two kinds , comic and ...
... thought " to the sprekers or zeggers who held forth now in the halls of the gentry , now before town - audiences , and they took to relating such tales for their own sakes . The tales , always in verse , are of two kinds , comic and ...
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Palavras e frases frequentes
allegory alliterative appears artistic Ayala ballad Beatrice Boccaccio Brunetto Latini Canterbury Canterbury Tales canto chansons de geste Chaucer chronicle Commedia composed composition contemporary Convivio couplet cynghanedd Dante Dante's death Decameron Dino Dino Compagni Divine Divine Comedy edition English epic epistles fabliau fact fame favour Florence Florentine fourteenth century France French Froissart Gamelyn German Ghibellines Gower Guelf Guido Guinicelli Guittone hand honour influence Italian Italy Jean King knight lady language later Latin legend lines literary literature lyric matter ment metre moral nature noble novel original Paradiso perhaps Petrarch poem poet poetical poetry popular probably prose Provençal Purgatory Ramon Muntaner regard rendered rhyme rhyme royal romance sense song sonnet soul speaks spirit stanza story strophe style syllables tale things thou thought tion translation Troubadour verse Villani Virgil vision Vita Nuova Wiclif words writings written