Proceedings of the British Academy, Volume 36 |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 44
Page 102
As far as I can judge , there is today a revival of interest in the kind of historical writing which was to a large extent neglected during the excitement of discovering distant cen- turies . This revival may be due , at least in part ...
As far as I can judge , there is today a revival of interest in the kind of historical writing which was to a large extent neglected during the excitement of discovering distant cen- turies . This revival may be due , at least in part ...
Page 200
As editor , John Morris - Jones confined his attention to points of palaeographical and grammatical interest , although John Rhys saw that ' beside the lexicographic interest of the texts now printed for the first time , 3 there is the ...
As editor , John Morris - Jones confined his attention to points of palaeographical and grammatical interest , although John Rhys saw that ' beside the lexicographic interest of the texts now printed for the first time , 3 there is the ...
Page 264
In the first period his interest was centred on Semitic languages , inscrip- tions , and history , and on Old Testament analysis and archaeo- logy . The year 1910 marked a turning point in his life , for in that year he was drawn to the ...
In the first period his interest was centred on Semitic languages , inscrip- tions , and history , and on Old Testament analysis and archaeo- logy . The year 1910 marked a turning point in his life , for in that year he was drawn to the ...
What people are saying - Write a review
We haven't found any reviews in the usual places.
Contents
PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS By Sir H I Bell | 15 |
ALESSANDRO MANZONI Italian Lecture By A P dEntrèves | 23 |
MORAL PRINCIPLES AND INDUCTIVE POLICIES Philosophical | 51 |
9 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Academy already appear become beginning British Bust called century character Chaucer College course criticism death decennalia described draped early English example fact France friends give hand Head historians human important inductive interest Italian Italy kind knowledge language later laureate lecture less manuscript Manzoni material means mind moral nature never occasion once past perhaps period play poet poetry possible present problem Professor publication published question reason recorded reference religion remark rhetorical Rome scholars seems sense standing suggestion suscepta Tale things tion tragedy true truth turn University Victory volume vota vows Welsh Wordsworth writing written