... VII
CHAPTER VIII
CHAPTER IX
CHAPTER X
CHAPTER XI
CHAPTER XII
History ofEnglish Literature, by George
Saintsbury
History ofEnglish Literature, by George Saintsbury 1
"For if your flowering heart ... into
English by another hand, but his HistoryofEdward V. was not a mean contribution to English prose.
Tyndale's New Testament had given a new and powerful impulse to the reading of English; ... qualities of
euphony and rhythm possessed by English. It is, however, quite certain that nothing was further from
Hooker's thoughts than the composition ofEnglishliterature merely as English literature. ...
... points of poetry, the power of exciting the sympathy of the reader by a faithful adherence to the
truth of nature, and the power of giving the interest of novelty by the modifying colours of imagination. ... HistoryofEnglish Romanticism in the
Nineteenth Century
The Project Gutenberg eBook, A HistoryofEnglish Romanticism in the
Nineteenth Century, by Henry A. Beers
This eBook is for the use of ... volume of his " ;History ofEnglish Poetry" (1781), Thomas Warton had spoken of the "Divine
Comedy" as "this wonderful compound of classical and romantic fancy, of pagan...
... covered the scheme of a monstrous
job in favour of the needy Court. And his own work went on in spite of the pressure of the Solicitor's place.
To the first years of his official life belong ... not of the virtue of the race,
but of the rightness of the way. And to speak truth, it is to the other but as palma to pugnus, part of the same
thing more large Myself am like the miller of Huntingdon, ... production of this time, of which we have a notice from himself in a letter to Toby
Matthews, the curious and ingenious little treatise on the Wisdom of the Ancients, "one of the most popular of
his...
... great profit in both health
and strength by keeping our thoughts off the body. By
forgetting that we have a body and thereby refraining form
interfering with the proper functioning of this ...
fortune of being in the presence of one of those great
spiritual people of whom I had read quite a bit in earlier
years.
“I felt convinced that I had met my deliverer, and at the
close of the ... The Message of a Master
http://www.RetrieveALover.com
Page 6
To The Reader
The following pages are the result of a series of notes
collected and set down in the form of a story and...
... the
first animal-human hybrid cells.
1965 The Board of Regents of the University of the
State of New York finds Southam and a colleague guilty
of unprofessional conduct and calls for stricter
guidelines ... process of scientific inquiry. Examine the often
contradictory forces of altruism and profit as they influenced research related to HeLa.
What are the risks and benefits of allowing profit to ... played in the development of the field of
cell culture, and the industry of selling HeLa cells and other human biological
materials.
11. Who profited monetarily from the sale of HeLa cells and other...
... rolled upward, heard the crackle of the
flames, the shrieks of the dying, the shouts of victory. England was saved.
Then suddenly he was awakened out of his dream by a blow to his shoulder, and ... raged, till at last, weary of fighting, and forsaken by nearly
all his followers, Alfred was forced to hide for a time in the marshes of Somerset.
This was the saddest part of Alfred's life. ... cut off Alban's head
and with a second the head of the soldier. At the same moment, we are told, the captain lost his sight and
remained blind for the rest of his life.
This is the story of...
... Whately on Jests Nature of Puns Effect of Custom and Habit Accessory
Emotion Disappointment and Loss Practical Jokes 307
CHAPTER XXII. 25
HistoryofEnglish Humour, Vol. 2 (of 2), by
CHAPTER I.
CHAPTER ... often heard of the attempts of whining lovers; of the charming poems they had composed in praise of
their mistresses' wit and beauty (tho' they have not had half so much of either of ... post of secretary of Legation at the
Hague, in which office he gave so much satisfaction to William III. that he made him one of his gentlemen of
the bed chamber. He became afterwards Secretary of...
... formed that of the Tugendbund,
or Friends of Virtue.
About the end of May, 1809, three enterprises—those of Katt, Dörnberg, and Schill—
had already given proofs of its existence. That of Duke William ... Frederick, or by the wish of blotting out the disgrace of the
campaign of 1792, entered heartily into the views of the allied powers; but the pacific
policy of the king, and of his minister ...
IV. —Clamours of the Russians against Barclay—Kutusof sent to supersede him—
Great merit of Barclay's plan of retreat
V. —Near prospect of a battle—Character of Kutusof—Sanguinary and...
... ofEnglish events (reign of George III.) may be traced in any of the English histories mentioned on
p. 60. For the Englishliteratureof the period; see the author's HistoryofEnglish Literature.
Valuable ... Team.
HISTORY OF AMERICAN LITERATURE
BY REUBEN POST HALLECK, M.A. (YALE) AUTHOR OF " ;HISTORY OFENGLISH LITERATURE& quot;
[Illustration: THE RETURN OF RIP VAN WINKLE]
PREFACE
The wide use of the ... biographies of Washington by
Lodge, of Franklin by Morse, of Hamilton by Lodge, and of Jefferson by Morse. (American Statesmen
Series.)
LITERARY
Tyler's The Literary Historyof the American Revolution,...
... 1913, the Treaty of Constantinople
was signed by Bulgaria and Turkey; by its terms Turkey retained possession of Adrianople and of a far larger
part of Thrace than its series of ignominious defeats ... manner of the arrival of the Slavs in the Balkan peninsula, of that of the Bulgars, and of the formation of
the Bulgarian nationality has already been described (cf. p. 26). The installation of the ... the home during the Middle Ages of a flourishing school of Serbian literature, which
was inspired by that of Italy. The influence of Italian civilization and of the Italian Church was naturally
strong...
... III
CHAPTER IV
CHAPTER V
History of French Literature, byEdward Dowden
Project Gutenberg's A Historyof French Literature, byEdward Dowden This eBook is for the use of anyone
anywhere at ... towards a new and
profounder conception of the life of societies or of humanity. By Turgot for the first time the idea of progress
was accepted as the ruling principle of history. It cannot be ... degenerate Italian literature, super-subtleties from
Spain these had still their votaries. And the conduct of life and characters of men of letters were often
unworthy of the vocation they professed. "La...
... of agriculture at the time of Domesday was apparently very low, judging by
the small returns of manors,[75] but by the time ofEdward I it had made considerable
progress. During the reign of ... prince with courts of his own, the arbiter of his tenants'
rights as well as owner of the land.
One of the most striking features of the Domesday survey is the large quantity of
arable land ...
demesnes of a quantity of manors, as was the custom, and kept thereon great flocks of
sheep, ranging from 300 to 1,500 on each manor.[127] The stock of the Bishop of
Winchester, by an inquisition...