Literature and Life, Book 4Scott, Foresman, 1933 - American Literature |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 77
Page 173
... human beings , whereas Jonson selected those whom he could satirize . This aspect of his drama may be traced to the classical theory that the play should reform the audience by making vice ridiculous . To sum up , in both the realistic ...
... human beings , whereas Jonson selected those whom he could satirize . This aspect of his drama may be traced to the classical theory that the play should reform the audience by making vice ridiculous . To sum up , in both the realistic ...
Page 301
... human nature and the society of that day . Tom in his youth and wanderings comes in contact with nearly every so- cial level and discovers men and women everywhere acting from customary mo- tives . Fielding believed that human beings ...
... human nature and the society of that day . Tom in his youth and wanderings comes in contact with nearly every so- cial level and discovers men and women everywhere acting from customary mo- tives . Fielding believed that human beings ...
Page 333
... human of Pope and Johnson human sympathy nature had changed funda- mentally . Such was not the case . Peo- ple still felt tenderly toward their rel- low human beings and brooded anx- iously over the problems of life . It was the ...
... human of Pope and Johnson human sympathy nature had changed funda- mentally . Such was not the case . Peo- ple still felt tenderly toward their rel- low human beings and brooded anx- iously over the problems of life . It was the ...
Contents
HISTORY | 4 |
PART ONEPAGAN AND MEDIEVAL TIMES 55 B C 1500 A D | 5 |
SELECTIONS FOR CHAPTER I | 15 |
Copyright | |
64 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
ballad BANQUO BARTLEY beauty Ben Jonson Beowulf called Canterbury Tales castle century chapter character Chaucer CLASS DISCUSSION court dear death drama Duncan England English essay eyes Faerie Queene fair father Faustus fear feeling Fleance give Gunga Din hand hath head hear heard heart heaven Hind Horn horse Jack Smith JAMES Johnson Keawe King Kokua LADY MACBETH LADY MACDUFF Lady of Shalott land learned lines literature live London look Lord lyric MACDUFF MALCOLM ment mind murder nature never night novel passage person PHILIP play poem poet poetry Queen romantic round satire scene Shakespeare sing sleep SNIGGERS song sonnet soul spirit stanza story sweet tell thane thee things thou thought tion TOFF town turned verse Wee Willie Winkie WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE WITCH words writing young