Vietnam or Thailand ? Vote for the TOP Country of the Week !
Updated: May 24, 2025
No one had slept in that part of the roof within the memory of old Eppie: no one, she believed, had ever slept there since the events of her tale; certainly no one had in Mrs Courthope's time. It was said also, that, invariably, sooner or later after such cries were heard, some evil befell either the Lord of Lossie, or some one of his family.
Certainly if the penance paid by the reader is any test, the novelist was successful in her effort to atone for the looseness of her early writings, when she left the province of fiction for that of the periodical essay. Elwin and Courthope's Pope, IV, 135, note 3. Elwin and Courthope's Pope, IV, 141. Elwin and Courthope 's Pope, IV, 232.
So, in the wondrous blush of the white world, the girl's cheeks glowed and yet did not confess too much. 'You will allow me to send in your compliments and inquire after Mr. Woodhouse as I pass? This was Courthope's farewell to Eliz, and she called joyfully in reply: 'You need not send back his message, for we shall know that they are "all very indifferent."
General and Non-Dramatic The Cambridge History of English Literature, Vols. IV., V., and VI. Courthope's A History of English Poetry, Vol. Schelling's English Literature during the Lifetime of Shakespeare. Seecombe and Allen's The Age of Shakespeare, 2 vols. Saintsbury's A History of Elizabethan Literature. Dictionary of National Biography for lives of Lyly, Sidney, Hooker.
'O why, asks Wesley, who was as strongly opposed to bleeding as he was fond of poulticing, 'will physicians play with the lives of their patients? 'Dr. Cheyne, writes Pope, 'was of Mr. Cheselden's opinion, that bleeding might be frequently repeated with safety, for he advised me to take four or five ounces every full moon. Elwin and Courthope's Pope's Works, ix. 162.
Elwin and Courthope's Pope, IV, 232. See also 159, note I. T.E. Lounsbury, The Text of Shakespeare, 281. "'The Popiad' which appeared in July, and 'The Female Dunciad' which followed the month after ... were essentially miscellanies devoted to attacks upon the poet, and for them authors were not so much responsible as publishers." Elwin and Courthope's Pope, IV, 141, note 5.
For the social life, see Traill, IV. The monumental history of this time has been written in eighteen volumes by Samuel Rawson Gardiner. His Oliver Cromwell, I vol., is excellent, as is also Frederick Harrison's Oliver Cromwell. The Cambridge History of English Literature, Vol. Courthope's History of English Poetry, Vol. Masterman's The Age of Milton.
Upon Courthope's inquiring after the health of the thief, he was told that beyond being severely frost-bitten he was little the worse. He was again drunk with the stimulants that the Morins had poured down his throat. The visitor ended the interview by saying that if Courthope would be good enough to drive the team through the drifts his own horse and sleigh would be sent after him the next day.
Here some plain and easy compliments were thrown in about Courthope's strength and the generous activity he had displayed, but not a word concerning his temporary disgrace; if this man knew of it he did not regard it as of any importance. He was a matter-of-fact young man, not much interested in Courthope as a stranger, immensely interested in the fact of the theft and all that concerned it.
Jusserand's Literary History of the English People. Taine's English Literature. Courthope's History of English Poetry, 6 vols. SELECTIONS FROM ENGLISH LITERATURE : *Pancoast and Spaeth's Early English Poems. *Ward's English Poets, 4 vols. *Bronson's English Poems, 4 vols. Oxford Treasury of English Literature, Vol. I., Beowulf to Jacobean; *Vol. II., Growth of the Drama; Vol.
Word Of The Day
Others Looking