Knight's Quarterly Magazine, Volume 3Knight, 1824 |
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Page 131
... Troubadours ; and Dryden , in the preface to his Fables , has borrowed from Rymer the remark , that the Provençal was in that age the most cultivated of modern languages , and that Chaucer profited by it to adorn and enrich the English ...
... Troubadours ; and Dryden , in the preface to his Fables , has borrowed from Rymer the remark , that the Provençal was in that age the most cultivated of modern languages , and that Chaucer profited by it to adorn and enrich the English ...
Page 132
... Troubadours * , in which he has given a short account of the lives and productions of each . That fastidiousness of national taste , which impels a Frenchman to make every thing that he touches French , has detracted very materially ...
... Troubadours * , in which he has given a short account of the lives and productions of each . That fastidiousness of national taste , which impels a Frenchman to make every thing that he touches French , has detracted very materially ...
Page 133
... Troubadours ; he has investigated the exist- ence and the institutions of the Courts of Love ; he has collected monuments of the Langue Romane anterior to the age of the Troubadours , both public Acts and Deeds , and various religious ...
... Troubadours ; he has investigated the exist- ence and the institutions of the Courts of Love ; he has collected monuments of the Langue Romane anterior to the age of the Troubadours , both public Acts and Deeds , and various religious ...
Page 134
... Troubadours : but in practice this golden age of chivalry had never an actual existence . If we look more closely into the records of those days , we find , that princes could even then be ambitious and unjust ; that courts were crowded ...
... Troubadours : but in practice this golden age of chivalry had never an actual existence . If we look more closely into the records of those days , we find , that princes could even then be ambitious and unjust ; that courts were crowded ...
Page 135
... Troubadours . Maître Pierre de Corbiac , or Corbian , is as happy in his Treasure , as the ideal sage of the stoics in the possession of all his wisdom . " I am rich in mind ; and although I have neither lands , nor castles , nor towns ...
... Troubadours . Maître Pierre de Corbiac , or Corbian , is as happy in his Treasure , as the ideal sage of the stoics in the possession of all his wisdom . " I am rich in mind ; and although I have neither lands , nor castles , nor towns ...
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Expressions et termes fréquents
Æneid ancient appear beautiful called cause Cephalonia character Corcyra Corfu corn court Courts of Love critic Dante Demosthenes effect English eyes favour fear feelings France French genius gentleman give Goletta hand Haselfoot heard heart honour human imagination island Italian Italy King Knight labour Lady Lisle lake of Garda least letters lived look Lord Lord Byron lover Malta Maltese manner means ment Milton mind Mirabeau Mitford Moonites moral Mule Narenor nation nature never noble opinion party passage passed passion perhaps person poem poet poetical poetry political Pope portmanteau possession present prince principles Provençal racter readers Santa Maura scarcely scene seems sentiment speak spirit sweet taste thee thing thou thought tion town Troubadours truth Tunis Valletta verse voice whole words writers young