Literature ; and should he never be able to pursue the subject beyond the limits here prescribed, he will have laid the foundation of accurate habits of thought and judgment, which cannot fail of being serviceable to him hereafter. The authors and works... Extracts from Livy, with notes by H. Lee-Warner - Page 14by Titus Livius - 1873Full view - About this book
| Peter Guthrie Tait - 1867 - 364 pages
...intelligible record of its life. Its thoughts, and its emotions, its graver and its less serious moods, its progress, or its degeneracy, are told by its best...will suggest the safest rules for the study of it. CL A KEN DON PRESS SERIES. 15 of literature before that epoch, it is not completely national. For it... | |
| Peter Guthrie Tait - Quaternions - 1867 - 366 pages
...intelligible record of its life. Its thoughts, and its emotions, its graver and its less serious moods, its progress, or its degeneracy, are told by its best...will suggest the safest rules for the study of it. * of literature before that epoch, it is not completely national. For it had no common organ of language... | |
| James Edwin Thorold Rogers - Economics - 1869 - 446 pages
...productions of the greatest minds in English Literature ; and should he never be able to pursue the subject beyond the limits here prescribed, he will have laid...from the Series. However great may be the value of 14 Clarendon Press Series. literature before that epoch, it is not completely national. For it had... | |
| Thomas Fowler - Logic - 1869 - 222 pages
...productions of the greatest minds in English Literature ; and should he never be able to pursue the subject beyond the limits here prescribed, he will have laid...from the Series. However great may be the value of 14 Clarendon Press Series. literature before that epoch, it is not completely national. For it had... | |
| Edmund Spenser - 1869 - 308 pages
...productions of the greatest minds in English Literature ; and should he never be able to pursue the subject beyond the limits here prescribed, he will have laid...Reformation are excluded from the Series. However great rriiy be the value of literature before that epoch, it is not completely national. For it had no common... | |
| Geoffrey Chaucer - 1869 - 304 pages
...authors and works selected are such as will best serve to illustrate English literature in its bistorical aspect. As " the eye of history," without which history...literature before that epoch, it is not completely nationa1. For it had no common organ of language ; it addressed itself to special classes ; it dealt... | |
| French classics - 1870 - 252 pages
...productions of the greatest minds in English Literature ; and should he never be able to pursue the subject beyond the limits here prescribed, he will have laid...literature before that epoch, it is not completely nationa1. For it had no common organ of language; it addressed itself to special classes ; it dealt... | |
| Thomas Fowler - Logic - 1870 - 372 pages
...productions of the greatest minds in English Literature ; and should he never be able to pursue the subject beyond the limits here prescribed, he will have laid...from the Series. However great may be the value of 14 Clarendon Press Series. literature before that epoch, it is not completely national. For it had... | |
| William Shakespeare - 1871 - 216 pages
...productions of the greatest minds in English Literature ; and should he never be able to pursue the subject beyond the limits here prescribed, he will have laid...from the Series. However great may be the value of 14 Clarendon Press Series, literature before that epoch, it is not completely national. For it had... | |
| Charles Wordsworth (bp. of St. Andrews.) - 1871 - 120 pages
...is the clfarest and most intelligible record of its life. Its thoughts and its emotions, its gravfr and its less serious modes, its progress, or its degeneracy,...from the Series. However great may be the value of Clarendon Press Series. literature before that epoch, it is not completely national. For it had no... | |
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