Biographical Essays and Essays on the PoetsOsgood, 1875 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 47
Page 28
... cause . Not only , therefore , would this whole region suffer more from internal and spon- taneous agitation , but it would be the more frequently traversed vindictively from without , and harassed by flying parties from Oxford , or ...
... cause . Not only , therefore , would this whole region suffer more from internal and spon- taneous agitation , but it would be the more frequently traversed vindictively from without , and harassed by flying parties from Oxford , or ...
Page 65
... cause less weighty than one , having for its object to deliver his honored name from a load of the most brutal ... caused his name to be dis- honored . We now resume the thread of our biog- raphy . The stream of history is centuries in ...
... cause less weighty than one , having for its object to deliver his honored name from a load of the most brutal ... caused his name to be dis- honored . We now resume the thread of our biog- raphy . The stream of history is centuries in ...
Page 97
... . Hall would attend the sick bed of his father - in - law ; and the discovery of this gentle- man's medical diary promised some gratification to our curiosity as to the cause of Shakspeare's death . Unfortunately , 9 NOTES . 97.
... . Hall would attend the sick bed of his father - in - law ; and the discovery of this gentle- man's medical diary promised some gratification to our curiosity as to the cause of Shakspeare's death . Unfortunately , 9 NOTES . 97.
Page 98
Thomas De Quincey. as to the cause of Shakspeare's death . Unfortunately , it does mut ormmence until the year 1617 . NOTE 20. Page 73 . An exception caght perhaps to be made for Sir Walter Scott and for Cervantes ; but with regard to ...
Thomas De Quincey. as to the cause of Shakspeare's death . Unfortunately , it does mut ormmence until the year 1617 . NOTE 20. Page 73 . An exception caght perhaps to be made for Sir Walter Scott and for Cervantes ; but with regard to ...
Page 114
... cause had ceased to operate ) was perfectly natural under the ex- planation we have given , but not otherwise . And how did he surmount this unhappy self - distrust ? Paradoxical as it may sound , we will venture to say , that with the ...
... cause had ceased to operate ) was perfectly natural under the ex- planation we have given , but not otherwise . And how did he surmount this unhappy self - distrust ? Paradoxical as it may sound , we will venture to say , that with the ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
absolute accident Addison admiration Alexander Pope amongst Anne Hathaway beauty Caleb Williams called century character Charles Lamb Christian circumstances connected Count Julian critics death Dryden Duke Dunciad effect England English expression fact father feeling Frankfort French French Revolution genius German Gilfillan Goethe Goldsmith's grandeur Grasmere Greek Hazlitt heart honor human idolatry Iliad instance intellectual interest Joseph Warton labor Lamb Lamb's Landor language less literary literature Lord Lord Harvey Lucretius marriage Mary Arden means ment Milton mind misanthropy mode moral nature never NOTE notice object once original passion perhaps philosophic poem poet poetry Pope Pope's popular prince rank reader reason regard satiric Schiller seems sense Shak Shakspeare Shakspeare's Shelley Shelley's social solemn speak spirit Stratford suffered supposed things thought tion true truth utter whilst whole word Wordsworth writing young