The Rise of English Literary Prose |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 88
Page v
... importance in the life of the English people , and it ends with the first quarter of the seventeenth century , when practice and experiment had made of English prose , in the reigns of Elizabeth and James , a highly developed and ...
... importance in the life of the English people , and it ends with the first quarter of the seventeenth century , when practice and experiment had made of English prose , in the reigns of Elizabeth and James , a highly developed and ...
Page xiii
... importance to writings otherwise not important . But the author has endeavored to choose his materials always with an eye to the main point , which has been to trace the growth of a temper and attitude of mind towards the use of speech ...
... importance to writings otherwise not important . But the author has endeavored to choose his materials always with an eye to the main point , which has been to trace the growth of a temper and attitude of mind towards the use of speech ...
Page 2
... importance among these shadowings of the future , English prose was coming to be applied to English thought in ways more effective and intimate than had ever before been necessary or possible . By the middle of the fourteenth century ...
... importance among these shadowings of the future , English prose was coming to be applied to English thought in ways more effective and intimate than had ever before been necessary or possible . By the middle of the fourteenth century ...
Page 4
... important is his translation of the De Consolatione Philosophiae of Boethius , made probably in entire ignorance of the fact that it had already been translated into English by King Alfred almost five hundred years before . The De ...
... important is his translation of the De Consolatione Philosophiae of Boethius , made probably in entire ignorance of the fact that it had already been translated into English by King Alfred almost five hundred years before . The De ...
Page 11
... important being whether the three versions are to be regarded as the work of a single poet or of two or more poets who revised and ex- panded the original theme as it was first developed by Langland . It is quite certain that Piers ...
... important being whether the three versions are to be regarded as the work of a single poet or of two or more poets who revised and ex- panded the original theme as it was first developed by Langland . It is quite certain that Piers ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
alliteration alliterative verse answer appeared Arcadia Ascham Bacon bishop character Chaucer chronicle church Cicero contemporary controversy courtly death declares defends Dialogue didacticism dignified discussion doctrine edition Elizabethan eloquence England English Bible English prose Euphues Euphuistic expression feeling followed French Gabriel Harvey Greek hath Henry VIII Hooker Ibid interest Jack Upland John kind Langland language later Latin learned lish literary Lollards London Lyly Lyly's Marprelate tracts Martin medieval ment merely method mind moral More's narrative Nashe nature never opinion original ornament passages Pecock phrasing picturesque Piers Plowman Plutarch poetry Polydore Vergil popular Prayer Book preachers preaching pulpit Puritan reader Reformation rhetorical romance says scholar scriptures seems sentence sermons Sidney simple sixteenth century speaks speech spirit story style stylistic Testament Thomas Nashe thou thought Tindale Tindale's tion tracts tradition translation treatises truth various verse vocabulary Wiclif words writing written
Popular passages
Page 435 - O eloquent, just, and mighty Death! whom none could advise, thou hast persuaded; what none hath dared, thou hast done; and whom all the world hath flattered, thou only hast cast out of the world and despised: thou hast drawn together all the far-stretched greatness, all the pride, cruelty, and ambition of man, and covered it all over with these two narrow words, Hie jacet.
Page x - ... what a province he had undertaken against the Bishop of Rome and the degenerate traditions of the church, and finding his own solitude, being no ways aided by the opinions of his own time, was enforced to awake all antiquity, and to call former times to his...
Page 543 - Learning, that of Henry VII., that of the Essays, being retractate, and made more perfect, well translated into Latin by the help of some good pens, which forsake me not. For these modern languages will, at one time or other, play the bankrupts with books : and since I have lost much time with this age, I would be glad, as God shall give me leave, to recover it with posterity.
Page 136 - The general and perpetual voice of men is as the sentence of God himself. For that which all men have at all times learned, Nature herself must needs have taught; and God being the author of Nature, her voice is but his instrument.
Page 135 - ... creatures, and especially his holy angels. For beholding the face of God, in admiration of so great excellency they all adore him ; and being rapt with the love of his beauty, they cleave inseparably for ever unto him. Desire to resemble him in goodness maketh *> them unweariable and even unsatiable in their longing to do by all means all manner good unto all the creatures of God, but especially unto the children of men...
Page 422 - Nay, madam, he is a doctor; never rack his person, but rack his style: let him have pen, ink, and paper, and help of books, and be enjoined to continue the story where it breaketh off, and I will undertake, by collating the styles, to judge whether he were the author or no...
Page 367 - This say I because I know the virtue so ; and this say I because it may be ever so, or, to say better, because it will be ever so. Read it, then, at your idle times, and the follies your good...
Page x - Martin Luther, conducted no doubt by an higher providence, but in discourse of reason, finding what a province he had undertaken against the bishop of Rome, and the degenerate traditions of the church...
Page 21 - In some place I shall set word for word, and active for active, and passive for passive, a-row right as it standeth, without changing of the order of words. But in some place I must change the order of words, and set active for passive, and again-ward. And in some place I must set a reason for a word, and tell what it meaneth. But for all such changing, the meaning shall stand and not be changed.