The Journal of English Studies, Volume 2, Issue 1H. Marshall & Son., 1913 |
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Page 16
... least ad urbem , fed if necessary , clothed if necessary , taken out of their slums , and kept out if necessary , and trained to be human beings . In this larger plan , which would be very different from a smattering of the three R's ...
... least ad urbem , fed if necessary , clothed if necessary , taken out of their slums , and kept out if necessary , and trained to be human beings . In this larger plan , which would be very different from a smattering of the three R's ...
Page 19
... least they will carry away the conviction that it is a thing worth loving . I remember once asking a clever boy about a master , who was famous for his classical knowledge , particularly in the matter of Greek syntax . Knowing that ...
... least they will carry away the conviction that it is a thing worth loving . I remember once asking a clever boy about a master , who was famous for his classical knowledge , particularly in the matter of Greek syntax . Knowing that ...
Page 21
... least , is claiming attention in virtue of a new poetic manner , which seems to involve a challenge to accepted theories as to the whole purpose and scope of poetry . The chorus of praise with which his work has been greeted would ...
... least , is claiming attention in virtue of a new poetic manner , which seems to involve a challenge to accepted theories as to the whole purpose and scope of poetry . The chorus of praise with which his work has been greeted would ...
Page 23
... least degree like— " The English Church both is and was A subsidy of Caiaphas . " In truth , Saul Kane is throughout a compound of irrecon- cilable elements . In The Widow in the Bye Street the story is marred by a lack of judgment in ...
... least degree like— " The English Church both is and was A subsidy of Caiaphas . " In truth , Saul Kane is throughout a compound of irrecon- cilable elements . In The Widow in the Bye Street the story is marred by a lack of judgment in ...
Page 26
... 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 form , into the mouths of plain uncultivated people , from whom they sound quite grotesque - a ...
... 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 form , into the mouths of plain uncultivated people , from whom they sound quite grotesque - a ...
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Acton Bond Alexander Nowell amongst artistic Baconian Benson Bishop boys C. L. THOMSON C. T. ONIONS Cambridge cards catalogue Catechism classical clear and pleasant College composition copies Corpus Christi College criticism Dean Nowell diction Dobson Edited by N. L. Education Elizabethan Elizabethan era Encyclopædia English literature ENGLISH STUDIES essay feel French Giles Fletcher Goldsmith Grammar Greek Horace Marshall Keble Keble's Latin learned lectures lending library Libraco literary London County Council M.A. Price 4d Masefield method N. L. FRAZER NONAGENARIAN notes Nowell's Oxford picture plays pleasant speech poems poetic poetry poets prose published pupils Queen reader reading reference library rhythm Richard Hakluyt Robertson school library schoolmasters second-hand secondary schools selected Shakespeare shelf shelves shillings stories style suggest taught teacher Teaching of English TEMPLE HOUSE thing Thomas Churchyard thought translation true verse W. H. D. ROUSE Whitaker Whitgift School writing