Longer English Poems: With Notes, Philological and Explanatory, and an Introduction on the Teaching of English. Chiefly for Use in SchoolsJohn Wesley Hales Macmillan and Company, 1894 - 427 sider |
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Side xvii
... ladies gay ! No haughty feat of arms I tell ; Soft is the note , and sad the lay " " That mourns the lovely Rosabelle . Moor , moor the barge , ye gallant crew ! And , gentle lady , deign to stay ! Rest thee in Castle Ravensheuch , Nor ...
... ladies gay ! No haughty feat of arms I tell ; Soft is the note , and sad the lay " " That mourns the lovely Rosabelle . Moor , moor the barge , ye gallant crew ! And , gentle lady , deign to stay ! Rest thee in Castle Ravensheuch , Nor ...
Side xviii
... Ladies generally read better , because they have more practice in the art ; amongst men the art can scarcely be said to exist . Certainly much of the music of poetry and of rhythm is often lost or diminished , if the passage containing ...
... Ladies generally read better , because they have more practice in the art ; amongst men the art can scarcely be said to exist . Certainly much of the music of poetry and of rhythm is often lost or diminished , if the passage containing ...
Side xxi
... ladies gay ; then the water - sprite with its wreck - prophetic scream ; the Seer with his fearful vision ; the young lords bent on their knightly pastime ; the dead barons lying in their quaint cerements THE TEACHING OF ENGLISH . xxi.
... ladies gay ; then the water - sprite with its wreck - prophetic scream ; the Seer with his fearful vision ; the young lords bent on their knightly pastime ; the dead barons lying in their quaint cerements THE TEACHING OF ENGLISH . xxi.
Side xxii
... ladies gay " that heard it , or are fancied to hear it , long years ago ; with the filial affection which omens and storms cannot daunt from its pious purpose - a most fair sight , and one , thank Heaven , that has not passed away from ...
... ladies gay " that heard it , or are fancied to hear it , long years ago ; with the filial affection which omens and storms cannot daunt from its pious purpose - a most fair sight , and one , thank Heaven , that has not passed away from ...
Side xxvi
... ladies gay , " no martial trumpet - clanging triumphant story , but a soft - toned lay with a sad ending . Then there occur in the song , as we have seen , long extinct manners and customs and superstitions . Is , then , Rosabelle a ...
... ladies gay , " no martial trumpet - clanging triumphant story , but a soft - toned lay with a sad ending . Then there occur in the song , as we have seen , long extinct manners and customs and superstitions . Is , then , Rosabelle a ...
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Adonais Æneid apud Johnson Burns called century chap charms Chaucer cognate common Comp Cowper death Dict doth Dream Dryden Dunciad earth Elegy English eyes Faerie Queene fair favourite force French Gloss Gray Gray's Greek Hamlet hath hear heart heaven Henry Hist Hymn Nat Il Penseroso Iliad Jamieson Julius Cæsar King King Lear L'Alleg L'Allegro ladies language Latin lived London Lord Lycid meaning meant Merchant of Venice Midsummer Night's Dream Milton Muse never night o'er Ovid Paradise Lost Paradise Regained passim Penseroso perhaps phrase Piers Ploughman poem poet poetical poetry Pope pride Prothal quotes reign Richard II round scarcely seems sense sentence Shakspere Shakspere's sing smile song soul sound speaks Spenser spirit stanza sweet tale thee thou thought Twas verb Virg voice Warton wings word writes