The Essays of EliaHoughton, Mifflin, and Company, 1907 - 226 psl. |
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iii psl.
... in the Mouth . 173 That Home is Home though it is never so Homely . That We should Rise with the Lark . 176 182 That We should Lie Down with the Lamb NOTES 185 189 CHARLES LAMB THAT period of English literature which began with.
... in the Mouth . 173 That Home is Home though it is never so Homely . That We should Rise with the Lark . 176 182 That We should Lie Down with the Lamb NOTES 185 189 CHARLES LAMB THAT period of English literature which began with.
v psl.
... English writers may be Goldsmith or may be Scott , " says Swin- burne , " but the best beloved will always be Lamb . Charles Lamb was born February 10 , 1775 , in the Tem- ple , on the banks of the Thames in London ; and in Lon- don ...
... English writers may be Goldsmith or may be Scott , " says Swin- burne , " but the best beloved will always be Lamb . Charles Lamb was born February 10 , 1775 , in the Tem- ple , on the banks of the Thames in London ; and in Lon- don ...
vi psl.
... English school . Hunt speaks in his sketch of Lamb's " pensive , brown , handsome and kindly face , " and of his Quaker - like dress that distinguished him through life . According to his own statement Lamb gained here the rank of ...
... English school . Hunt speaks in his sketch of Lamb's " pensive , brown , handsome and kindly face , " and of his Quaker - like dress that distinguished him through life . According to his own statement Lamb gained here the rank of ...
vii psl.
... English reading " into which Mackery End tells us that Mary Lamb was " tumbled early to browse at will upon a fair and wholesome pastur- age " was , without doubt , his library . This bequest , with Lamb's own salary , and the little ...
... English reading " into which Mackery End tells us that Mary Lamb was " tumbled early to browse at will upon a fair and wholesome pastur- age " was , without doubt , his library . This bequest , with Lamb's own salary , and the little ...
viii psl.
... English writers of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries , " preferring by - ways Lamb's to highways . " " I gather myself up unto the old things , " he was always saying , and his dictum , " when a new book comes out , I read an old ...
... English writers of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries , " preferring by - ways Lamb's to highways . " " I gather myself up unto the old things , " he was always saying , and his dictum , " when a new book comes out , I read an old ...
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Pagrindiniai terminai ir frazės
admiration Æneid Alice Benchers better Blakesmoor Blakesware Bridget brother called Calne cards Charles Lamb Chimæra Christ's Hospital Coleridge common cousin dear death dreams English Essays of Elia face Faerie Queene famous fancy father feel garden gentle gentleman grace half hand hath heart Hertfordshire Inner Temple John Lamb knew Leigh Hunt less lived London Magazine look Lucas Mary Mary Lamb Milton's mind morning nature never night NOTE 11 NOTE 12 NOTE 9 occasion OLD BENCHERS once palate Paradise Lost passage passion person play pleasant pleasure Plumer poem poet poor Recollections relish remember seems sense sister smile sort South-Sea House speak spirit stood story Street sweet taste thee thing thou thought tion Tipp told turn verses Virgil's walk whist writes young
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