Romantic Reassessment, Volumes 106-107Institut für Englische Sprache und Literatur, Universität Salzburg., 1982 |
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Page 24
NO The ters and become of cognitive import . Byron leaves the tension Yet unresolved , as he ought -- neither stanza ... become something none would bother to covet . When Byron mentions his own poem , " even a rag like this , " he ...
NO The ters and become of cognitive import . Byron leaves the tension Yet unresolved , as he ought -- neither stanza ... become something none would bother to covet . When Byron mentions his own poem , " even a rag like this , " he ...
Page 56
... become an author . He could not have had a high opinion of law , as a profession , when he heard of a gentleman who main- tained himself in the study of law by writing pamphlets in favour of the ministry . 135 The rosy picture of London ...
... become an author . He could not have had a high opinion of law , as a profession , when he heard of a gentleman who main- tained himself in the study of law by writing pamphlets in favour of the ministry . 135 The rosy picture of London ...
Page 318
... become names only . A glance at the anthology of political writings of the sixteenth , seventeenth and eighteenth centuries will suffice to prove why only Burke has gained a place in the history of literature , and not other writers on ...
... become names only . A glance at the anthology of political writings of the sixteenth , seventeenth and eighteenth centuries will suffice to prove why only Burke has gained a place in the history of literature , and not other writers on ...
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Common terms and phrases
American beauty become believed Burke's Byron called cause character common continued criticism death described discover earth Edmund Burke eighteenth century England English essay eternal existence experience expression fact fall feelings figures France French give hand Hastings human Ibid ideas important India interest Juan knowledge language less letter light literary literature living London Lord man's manners matter means metaphor mind moral narrator nature never opinion pamphlets paragraph passage passion perhaps person play poem poet poetic poetry political praise present principles prose question quoted reason Reflections reform regarded rhyme says sense sentence social society sort soul speech spirit style things thought true truth turn whole writing wrote