The Study of English Literature: A Plea for Its Recognition and Organization at the UniversitiesMacmillan, 1891 - 167 pages |
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¯neid ¿sthetic affected ancient Classical Anglo-Saxon literature Aristotle Attic Burke century Chair Chaucer chief Cicero Class Classical Literature Coleridge criticism culture curriculum discipline Discuss that statement Drama Dryden edition Eneid English Literature English Poetry epic Essay Ethics examination faculty Faerie Queene Final School French gast genius Greece Greece and Rome Greek Greek and Latin Greek and Roman Homer Honours Horace illustrate important influence exercised instruction Italian Italy knowledge language lectures letters Litera Humaniores literary Literatures of Greece Lord Carnarvon lyric Macbeth master masterpieces Matthew Arnold Milton Modern Literature moral Orations Oratory Oxford and Cambridge particular Petrarch Philology Philosophy Pindar poems Poetics poets point of view political Pope Professor Freeman prose questions Quintilian regarded relation Rhetoric Roman Classics School of Literature Shakespeare side Sophocles student study of English study of Literature style subject of teaching taste teachers Thucydides tion tragedies Universities University of Oxford Virgil Wordsworth writers
Popular passages
Page 79 - I know but one way of fortifying my soul against these gloomy presages and terrors of mind, and that is, by securing to myself the friendship and protection of that Being who disposes of events, and governs futurity. He sees at one view, the whole thread...
Page 60 - The critic eye, that microscope of wit, Sees hairs and pores, examines bit by bit : How parts relate to parts or they to whole ; The body's harmony, the beaming soul, Are things which Kuster, Burman, Wasse shall see, When man's whole frame is obvious to a flea.
Page 69 - To ask, to guess, to know, as they commence, As fancy opens the quick springs of sense, We ply the memory, we load the brain, Bind rebel wit, and double chain on chain ; Confine the thought, to exercise the breath ; And keep them in the pale words till death. Whate'er the talents, or howe'er designed, We hang one jingling padlock on the mind : A poet the first day he dips his quill ; And what the last ? A very poet still.
Page 65 - The mind it neither enlarges, stimulates, nor refines. On the contrary, it too often induces or confirms that peculiar woodenness and opacity, that singular coarseness of feeling and purblindness of moral and intellectual vision, which has in all ages been characteristic of mere philologists.
Page 79 - I recommend myself to his care ; when I awake, I give myself up to his direction. Amidst all the evils that threaten me, I will look up to him for help, and question not but he will either avert them, or turn them to my advantage. Though I know neither the time nor the manner of...
Page 23 - ... literary teachers should aim would have no security that his work would not be tested and his pupils plucked by a man against whose views his whole work had been a tacit protest. If in a school or institute instruction in English literature be required an application for such instruction is made — and the rest is fortune. It may come in the form of excellent lectures the theory and method of which proceed on the principle that English literature began in the valleys of the Punjab and ended...
Page 69 - Lincoln,12 that the following lines from the Dunciad should be inscribed in letters of gold over the doors of the Classical Schools, he replied with a smile, 'Substitute letters of lead, and you have my entire approval': Since man from beasts by Words is known, Words are man's province: Words we teach alone When Reason doubtful, like the Samian letter, Points us two ways, the narrower is the better. Plac'd at the door of Learning youth to guide, We never suffer it to stand too wide; To ask, to guess,...
Page 54 - ... deficiency in our national education. In a country like ours, where the current will always run in a scientific and positive direction, nothing is so much to be regretted as the almost entire absence of any systematic provision for ' musical ' culture. At the Universities the want is to some extent supplied by the study of classical literature, but throughout the country our own literature must necessarily be the chief medium for disseminating that culture, if it is to be disseminated at all....