Spenser |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 24
Page 9
... interest was attracted , in the appositions or examinations , to the promising senior boy of the school . At any rate , Spenser , who afterwards celebrated Grindal's qualities as a bishop , was admitted to a place , one which befitted a ...
... interest was attracted , in the appositions or examinations , to the promising senior boy of the school . At any rate , Spenser , who afterwards celebrated Grindal's qualities as a bishop , was admitted to a place , one which befitted a ...
Page 17
... interest , he certainly was parted by the widest gulf . Indeed , he had not the sternness and concentration of purpose , which made Milton the great puritan poet . Spenser took his Master's degree in 1576 , and then left Cambridge . He ...
... interest , he certainly was parted by the widest gulf . Indeed , he had not the sternness and concentration of purpose , which made Milton the great puritan poet . Spenser took his Master's degree in 1576 , and then left Cambridge . He ...
Page 18
... as our ancestors of Addison's day regarded the comparison between Gothic and Palladian architecture . One , even if it sometimes had a certain romantic interest , was rude and coarse ; the other was the perfection 18 [ CHAP . SPENSER .
... as our ancestors of Addison's day regarded the comparison between Gothic and Palladian architecture . One , even if it sometimes had a certain romantic interest , was rude and coarse ; the other was the perfection 18 [ CHAP . SPENSER .
Page 19
... interest of having been Spenser's first , and as far as we can see , to the last , dearest friend . By both of his younger fellow - students at Cambridge he was looked up to with the deepest reverence and the most confiding affection ...
... interest of having been Spenser's first , and as far as we can see , to the last , dearest friend . By both of his younger fellow - students at Cambridge he was looked up to with the deepest reverence and the most confiding affection ...
Page 30
... interests and divides mankind , from high to low . Their animating principle was a high and a sacred cause : they had become wars of liberty , and wars of religion . The world had settled down to the fixed antipathies and steady ...
... interests and divides mankind , from high to low . Their animating principle was a high and a sacred cause : they had become wars of liberty , and wars of religion . The world had settled down to the fixed antipathies and steady ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
adventure allegory amid beauty Burghley character Chaucer Colin Clout's Court dangerous delight Desmond doth Earl Edmund Spenser Elizabeth England English poetry Englishmen evil eyes Faerie Queene fashion favour Gabriel Harvey gentlemen Geoffrey Fenton grace Grindal Harvey's hath honour ideas imagination Ireland Irish Italian John Norreys Kilcolman knights Lady land language learning Leicester literary Lord Grey Lord Grey's ment Merchant Taylors mind moral Munster natural ness never noble Norreys OLIVER GOLDSMITH passion pastoral peace person Petrarch Philip Sidney picture poem poet poet's poetical praise Prince published Puritan rebellion Rosalind Samuel Johnson scene scorn seems Shakespere Shepherd's Calendar Sidney's Sir Walter Ralegh Smerwick Sonnets Spen Spenser spirit story strange sweetness things thought tion translation truth unto verse vertues Virgil Walter Ralegh wont words writes