The Journal of English Studies, Volumes 2-3H. Marshall & Son, 1913 |
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Page 2
... seems unfitting in the balance of things that this Elizabethan Methusaleh , in compensation for his unique stretch of watchfulness over the renascence of life in every direction , should be relegated " to the background . " There is ...
... seems unfitting in the balance of things that this Elizabethan Methusaleh , in compensation for his unique stretch of watchfulness over the renascence of life in every direction , should be relegated " to the background . " There is ...
Page 9
... seems only fair to mention that Thomas Fuller also alludes to him , though only in connection with angling . Whilst employed in the pursuit of this art , it is stated that " either accidentally or by design , for the accounts vary ...
... seems only fair to mention that Thomas Fuller also alludes to him , though only in connection with angling . Whilst employed in the pursuit of this art , it is stated that " either accidentally or by design , for the accounts vary ...
Page 10
... seems to have been an acceptable preacher , especially for great occasions . Thus more than once he preached the Spital Sermon . In 1561 a great fire occurred , burning down the steeple and a portion of St. Paul's . The next Sunday but ...
... seems to have been an acceptable preacher , especially for great occasions . Thus more than once he preached the Spital Sermon . In 1561 a great fire occurred , burning down the steeple and a portion of St. Paul's . The next Sunday but ...
Page 12
... seems to emerge from the background into the glare of renown , this may perhaps bear quotation : Great Alexander all the world Did in subjection bringe : Rude barbarous people thou dost tame ; Thou dost a greater thing . * We cannot do ...
... seems to emerge from the background into the glare of renown , this may perhaps bear quotation : Great Alexander all the world Did in subjection bringe : Rude barbarous people thou dost tame ; Thou dost a greater thing . * We cannot do ...
Page 15
... seems that no parents now ever read aloud to their children , or let the children read to them ; all is left to chance or the schoolmaster . And I am bound to say that we schoolmasters are culpably careless , even where the material is ...
... seems that no parents now ever read aloud to their children , or let the children read to them ; all is left to chance or the schoolmaster . And I am bound to say that we schoolmasters are culpably careless , even where the material is ...
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Common terms and phrases
æsthetic Alexander Nowell Authorised Version authors beauty better Bible Bishops C. L. THOMSON C. T. ONIONS Cambridge classical composition course criticism Dryden Edited by C. T. elementary Elizabethan England English literature ENGLISH STUDIES English teaching essay expression Faerie Queene feeling French Genevan German Gervinus girls give grammar interesting J. M. ROBERTSON language Latin learned lectures lesson literary London London County Council M.A. Price matter method modern moral N. L. FRAZER natural Nowell original Oxford passage perhaps phrase play poems poet poetry Price 4d Professor prose pupils Quintilian reader rhythm scholars secondary schools sentences Shakespeare Sir Arthur Quiller-Couch Sir Roger speak speech story Stratford-upon-Avon student style taught teacher teaching of English things thou thought translation Ulrici verse W. H. D. ROUSE words writing written young