The Journal of English Studies, Volumes 2-3H. Marshall & Son, 1913 |
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Page 12
... thought on the Elizabethan Dean . also , with all his vers ave praise " I say this good man was a dear lover and constant practiser of angling as any age can produce ; and his custom was to spend besides his fixed hours of prayer ...
... thought on the Elizabethan Dean . also , with all his vers ave praise " I say this good man was a dear lover and constant practiser of angling as any age can produce ; and his custom was to spend besides his fixed hours of prayer ...
Page 18
... thoughts , and we can hear them , and when their voices do not rub our nerves the wrong way . I will ask , what will be the effect on the English classwork ? For one thing , we shall be able to act our Shakespeare or our Sheridan ...
... thoughts , and we can hear them , and when their voices do not rub our nerves the wrong way . I will ask , what will be the effect on the English classwork ? For one thing , we shall be able to act our Shakespeare or our Sheridan ...
Page 19
... thoughts of man's life ? Let no one say that literature cannot be taught : at least the love of it can . And this great subject is open free to every English child , if you can only get him young . It needs no high critical ability , no ...
... thoughts of man's life ? Let no one say that literature cannot be taught : at least the love of it can . And this great subject is open free to every English child , if you can only get him young . It needs no high critical ability , no ...
Page 22
... thoughts and feelings that accompanied them , even if he had not been more or less drunk all the time , is more than anyone can be asked to believe . Had the narrative been given in the third person some allowance might have been made ...
... thoughts and feelings that accompanied them , even if he had not been more or less drunk all the time , is more than anyone can be asked to believe . Had the narrative been given in the third person some allowance might have been made ...
Page 26
... thoughts and feelings that are out of keeping with the general features of the portrait , at least in the form in which they are uttered . The author is constantly making the mistake of putting his own sentiments , couched in a poetic ...
... thoughts and feelings that are out of keeping with the general features of the portrait , at least in the form in which they are uttered . The author is constantly making the mistake of putting his own sentiments , couched in a poetic ...
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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