Practical Modern English, Volume 3University of London Press, 1949 |
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Page 95
... Further , at any moment , on promising not to preach in public , he could have had his freedom . He was released in 1666 , but almost immediately arrested again for preaching , and for a further six years he remained in gaol . He was ...
... Further , at any moment , on promising not to preach in public , he could have had his freedom . He was released in 1666 , but almost immediately arrested again for preaching , and for a further six years he remained in gaol . He was ...
Page 104
... Further , Evelyn's diary covered sixty - six years ; Pepys a little over nine years . Again , Pepys tells us how the ordinary seventeenth - century man and woman lived , particularly in London , while Evelyn deals with country ...
... Further , Evelyn's diary covered sixty - six years ; Pepys a little over nine years . Again , Pepys tells us how the ordinary seventeenth - century man and woman lived , particularly in London , while Evelyn deals with country ...
Page 239
... further education these would never become reality . Of this time he wrote : No words can express the secret agony of my soul as I sunk into this companionship ; compared these everyday associates with those of my happier childhood ...
... further education these would never become reality . Of this time he wrote : No words can express the secret agony of my soul as I sunk into this companionship ; compared these everyday associates with those of my happier childhood ...
Contents
THE LITERATURE OF THE ANGLOSAXONS | 9 |
THE NORMAN CONQUEST AND AFTER | 18 |
GEOFFREY CHAUCER THE FATHER OF ENGLISH POETRY | 24 |
Copyright | |
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A. E. Housman afterwards appeared ballads beauty became began Beowulf blank verse Byron Cambridge Canterbury Tales career Chapter character Charles Charles Lamb Chaucer Church Coleridge College critics deal death described died drama dramatist early educated eighteenth century England English language English literature enjoyed essays excellent expressed Faerie Queene fame famous father fiction friends genius heroic couplet humour influence interest John John Keats John Masefield Johnson Keats King language later literary lived Lord lyrical married Milton Morality plays nature never night novel novelist Oxford Pepys period plays poems poet poetry Pope popular prose published Queen realise recognised romantic Rossetti Roundheads satire says Shakespeare Shelley shows songs sonnets stanza story style success suffered tells Tennyson thee theme thou to-day Victorian W. B. Yeats W. H. Davies William wonderful words Wordsworth writing written wrote