English Literature ...New university society, 1941 |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 49
Page 6
... less chamber . " We begin to reflect upon the nature of what delights us , the specific causes of our pleasure , the exact way in which the effect is produced . Take a sport like fishing . A boy begins as a raw adventurer . He discovers ...
... less chamber . " We begin to reflect upon the nature of what delights us , the specific causes of our pleasure , the exact way in which the effect is produced . Take a sport like fishing . A boy begins as a raw adventurer . He discovers ...
Page 189
... less of a mystic than Hudson , and his interest in human nature was foreign to Hudson . Lawrence's prose is very uneven . At times he gives us descriptive passage of the greatest distinction , such as the descriptions of flowers in Sons ...
... less of a mystic than Hudson , and his interest in human nature was foreign to Hudson . Lawrence's prose is very uneven . At times he gives us descriptive passage of the greatest distinction , such as the descriptions of flowers in Sons ...
Page 207
... less be possible , with less ; for I have been long wakened from that dream of hope , in which I once boasted myself with so much exul- tation , my Lord , your Lordship's most humble , most obedient servant , SAM . JOHNSON . J JOHN ...
... less be possible , with less ; for I have been long wakened from that dream of hope , in which I once boasted myself with so much exul- tation , my Lord , your Lordship's most humble , most obedient servant , SAM . JOHNSON . J JOHN ...
Contents
READING MAKETH A FULL MAN by Geoffrey Crump M | 15 |
A MIRROR HELD UP TO LIFE | 24 |
TOM JONES IN TROUBLE Henry Fielding | 59 |
Copyright | |
26 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
adventure appeared beauty Bennet called Captain Cook century character Chaucer Collins Copperfield criticism D. H. Lawrence daughter delight Dickens door Dupin England English prose essay essayist experience expression eyes father feel Forsyte Saga G. K. CHESTERTON give greatest hand Heathcliff honour human humour I. A. Richards imagination interest Jane Austen Johnny Johnson Keogh kind L'Espanaye lady language laugh letters literary living look Madame manner matter Micawber mind modern moral mystery nature never night novel novelist observed passage perhaps person pleasure plot poem poet poetry Polly reader romance seemed sense Shakespeare short story Sons and Lovers Soulis style T. S. Eliot taste tell things thought to-day Tom Jones travel books truth turned verse voice whole woman words Wordsworth writing written wrote Wuthering Heights young