The Pelican Guide to English Literature: From Dickens to HardyPenguin Books, 1957 |
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Page 55
... attitude to religion , it was the case that Victorian agnosticism devel- oped some of the characteristic narrowness and rigidity associated with puritanism . Charles Darwin deplores the loss of the ability to enjoy poetry or painting or ...
... attitude to religion , it was the case that Victorian agnosticism devel- oped some of the characteristic narrowness and rigidity associated with puritanism . Charles Darwin deplores the loss of the ability to enjoy poetry or painting or ...
Page 85
... attitude to his wives and who married three times . The opinion of G. M. Hopkins has something to do with this improve- ment in Patmore's standing : ' Your poems are a good deed done for the Catholic Church and another for England , for ...
... attitude to his wives and who married three times . The opinion of G. M. Hopkins has something to do with this improve- ment in Patmore's standing : ' Your poems are a good deed done for the Catholic Church and another for England , for ...
Page 148
... attitude urged on her by a situation in which she begins with nothing , has nothing to lose and everything to gain , positively enjoys the game of duplicity , and doesn't much mind slipping back into the dingy Bohemia of her origins ...
... attitude urged on her by a situation in which she begins with nothing , has nothing to lose and everything to gain , positively enjoys the game of duplicity , and doesn't much mind slipping back into the dingy Bohemia of her origins ...
Table des matières
G D KLINGOPULOS | 11 |
G D KLINGOPULOS | 59 |
R C CHURCHILL | 119 |
Droits d'auteur | |
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achievement appears Arnold attempt attitude become Browning buildings called Carlyle century character Church common complete course criticism death Dickens early educated effect England English Essays example experience expression fact feeling George George Eliot give hand Hardy Hopkins House human ideas imaginative important impression influence interest John kind later less Letters lines literary literature living London matter means middle mind moral nature never novel novelist once original Oxford perhaps period play poem poet poetry political popular present published reader reading religious represented Review romantic Rossetti Ruskin seems sense sentiment shows social society spirit story success suggest Tennyson Thackeray things thought tion tradition true turn verse Victorian vols whole writing written wrote York young