Great English Writers, Volume 1Oscar James Campbell, Hardin Craig, James Francis Augustin Pyre, Joseph Morris Thomas F. S. Crofts & Company, 1939 - English literature A chronological rearrangement, with many additions, of the material included in the editors' Great English poets and Great English prose writers. cf. Pref. |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 78
Page 211
... hast thy faith with perjuree , And sold thy selfe to serve Duessa vild , With whom in al abuse thou hast thy selfe defild ? XLVII ' Is not he just , that all this doth behold From highest heven , and beares an equall eie ? Shall he thy ...
... hast thy faith with perjuree , And sold thy selfe to serve Duessa vild , With whom in al abuse thou hast thy selfe defild ? XLVII ' Is not he just , that all this doth behold From highest heven , and beares an equall eie ? Shall he thy ...
Page 374
... hast thou fought 31 The better fight , who single hast maintained Against revolted multitudes the cause Of truth , in word mightier than they in arms , And for the testimony of truth hast borne Universal reproach , far worse to bear ...
... hast thou fought 31 The better fight , who single hast maintained Against revolted multitudes the cause Of truth , in word mightier than they in arms , And for the testimony of truth hast borne Universal reproach , far worse to bear ...
Page 705
... hast sought The truth in solitude , and , since the days 461 That gave thee liberty , full long desired , To serve in Nature's temple , thou hast been The most assiduous of her ministers ; In many things my brother , chiefly here In ...
... hast sought The truth in solitude , and , since the days 461 That gave thee liberty , full long desired , To serve in Nature's temple , thou hast been The most assiduous of her ministers ; In many things my brother , chiefly here In ...
Contents
PRECHAUCERIAN POETRY | 1 |
English Prose from the Beginnings | 237 |
OF ANGER | 267 |
Copyright | |
22 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Æneid ancient Arcite Aristotle arms Bacon Beowulf body brest Chaucer courser court dear death delight doth Dryden earth Ecgtheow Elfin knight English eyes Faerie Queene fair fear Geat give gold grace Grendel Gringolet ground hand hast hath head heard heart Heaven Hell Heorot Heremod honour Hrothgar Hrunting Hygelac Johnson King knight labour lady learning light live look Lord ment mind mordre namore nature never noble o'er passion persons play pleasure poem poet praise prince prose Queene quoth reason rest Scyldings seems seyde shal side sight soul spirit stood Tatler tell Thanne thee ther Theseus things thou thought tion trew truth Unferth unto virtue ween whan whereof wise words writing wyde