The Works of Matthew Arnold, Volume 4Macmillan, 1903 |
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Page 3
... honour is that charlatanism shall find no entrance ; herein lies the inviolable- ness of that noble portion of man's being . ' It is admirably said , and let us hold fast to it . In poetry , which is thought and art in one , it is the ...
... honour is that charlatanism shall find no entrance ; herein lies the inviolable- ness of that noble portion of man's being . ' It is admirably said , and let us hold fast to it . In poetry , which is thought and art in one , it is the ...
Page 19
... honour which has come to make stay in France may never depart thence ! ' Yet it is now all gone , this French romance- poetry , of which the weight of substance and the power of style are not unfairly represented by this extract from ...
... honour which has come to make stay in France may never depart thence ! ' Yet it is now all gone , this French romance- poetry , of which the weight of substance and the power of style are not unfairly represented by this extract from ...
Page 44
... honour of Shakspeare . Shakspeare and Milton -he who wishes to keep his standard of excel- lence high , cannot choose two better objects of regard and honour . And it is an American who has chosen them , and whose beautiful gift in honour ...
... honour of Shakspeare . Shakspeare and Milton -he who wishes to keep his standard of excel- lence high , cannot choose two better objects of regard and honour . And it is an American who has chosen them , and whose beautiful gift in honour ...
Page 49
... the like great style . Through Milton they may gain it , for , in conclusion , Milton is English ; this master in the great style of the ancients is English . Virgil , whom Milton loved and honoured , has at the end VOL . IV E 49 II MILTON.
... the like great style . Through Milton they may gain it , for , in conclusion , Milton is English ; this master in the great style of the ancients is English . Virgil , whom Milton loved and honoured , has at the end VOL . IV E 49 II MILTON.
Page 50
Matthew Arnold George William Erskine Russell. whom Milton loved and honoured , has at the end of the Æneid a noble passage , where Juno , seeing the defeat of Turnus and the Italians imminent , the victory of the Trojan invaders assured ...
Matthew Arnold George William Erskine Russell. whom Milton loved and honoured , has at the end of the Æneid a noble passage , where Juno , seeing the defeat of Turnus and the Italians imminent , the victory of the Trojan invaders assured ...
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admirable Amiel Anna Karénine beauty Burns Byron called Carlyle century character charm Chaucer classic Count Tolstoi criticism diction Dryden Emerson England English poetry English poets excellent eyes Fanny Brawne faults feel France French genius George Sand gift give goddess Godwin Goethe Gray Gray's Greek Hamlet happiness Harriet heart honour humane letters instinct interesting Keats kind knowledge language Leopardi literary literature live Lord Byron Madame Bovary matter Milton mind modern Molière nation nature ness never novel numbers ourselves passages passion perhaps philosophy piece Plato pleasure poems poet poetic truth praise present Professor Dowden Professor Huxley prose quoted recognise religion remnant Sainte-Beuve Scherer sense seriousness Shakspeare Shelley Shelley's society soul speak spirit style sure tells thought tion true unsound verse Victor Hugo virtue Voltaire Wilson Barrett words Wordsworth Wordsworthian writes Wronsky