Literature and Life, 4. raamatScott, Foresman and Company, 1924 |
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Page v
... human spirit in all ages , a chief source for opening up the secrets of the universe . This means that in the earlier parts of the course we are less concerned with literary chronology and history and even with biography than is the ...
... human spirit in all ages , a chief source for opening up the secrets of the universe . This means that in the earlier parts of the course we are less concerned with literary chronology and history and even with biography than is the ...
Page 3
... human history , the slow evolution of our present civili- zation . To it belong studies in the relations of men to each other today , such as the political and social sciences . And in the group of studies is also one that interprets ...
... human history , the slow evolution of our present civili- zation . To it belong studies in the relations of men to each other today , such as the political and social sciences . And in the group of studies is also one that interprets ...
Page 4
... human experience . They will present to you a thousand scenes in which various aspects of the meaning of life are pictured . Some of the rooms in this house are full of merri- ment ; others are filled with human tragedy . In one of the ...
... human experience . They will present to you a thousand scenes in which various aspects of the meaning of life are pictured . Some of the rooms in this house are full of merri- ment ; others are filled with human tragedy . In one of the ...
Page 5
... human jelly - fish , open to new impressions , new theories , but with no intelligence or power of testing for himself . He is spineless . Neither the animated fact - bag nor the human jelly - fish has any mastery of knowledge . It is a ...
... human jelly - fish , open to new impressions , new theories , but with no intelligence or power of testing for himself . He is spineless . Neither the animated fact - bag nor the human jelly - fish has any mastery of knowledge . It is a ...
Page 28
... human reader may not be " a whit the wiser when the word had been swallowed . " Point out other illustrations of wit or humor in the Riddles . 2. What attitude toward war is expressed by " A Shield " ? 3. Explain the steps in the ...
... human reader may not be " a whit the wiser when the word had been swallowed . " Point out other illustrations of wit or humor in the Riddles . 2. What attitude toward war is expressed by " A Shield " ? 3. Explain the steps in the ...
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Other editions - View all
Literature and Life, 4. raamat Edwin Greenlaw,William Harris Elson,Christine M. Keck Snippet view - 1929 |
Common terms and phrases
ancient Banquo Battle of Brunanburh beauty Ben Jonson Beowulf Burns Caedmon called century character Chaucer dear death doth drama dream earth Elizabethan England English literature epic essay Everyman eyes Faerie Queene fair famous fear feeling genius George Eliot give hath heart heaven hero heroic couplet honor human interest Johnson king Lady Lady Macbeth land learning Lethbury light lines literary living look Lord Lycidas lyric Macb Macbeth Macd Macduff means ment Milton mind nature never night NOTES AND QUESTIONS novel Paradise Lost person plays poem poet poetic poetry praise prose romance scenes Scotland Shakespeare sing song sonnet soul spirit stanza story style sweet tell Tennyson thee theme things thou thought tion tragedy truth verse witches words Wordsworth writing written wrote wyll