Proceedings of the British Academy, Volume 3British Academy - Humanities |
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Page 267
... Divine Comedy , it is a mistake to suppose , with Macaulay , that the distinctness is employed ' simply to make the meaning of the writer as clear to the reader as it is to himself ' . It is employed really because the whole atmosphere ...
... Divine Comedy , it is a mistake to suppose , with Macaulay , that the distinctness is employed ' simply to make the meaning of the writer as clear to the reader as it is to himself ' . It is employed really because the whole atmosphere ...
Page 268
... Divine Comedy and Paradise Lost , to which Macaulay restricts his comparison of the styles of the two poets , and will explain why allegory is made the vehicle of one poem , while the form of the Classical epic is adopted in the other ...
... Divine Comedy and Paradise Lost , to which Macaulay restricts his comparison of the styles of the two poets , and will explain why allegory is made the vehicle of one poem , while the form of the Classical epic is adopted in the other ...
Page 269
... Divine Comedy appeared to him a year after the death of Beatrice , when he was twenty - six years old , that is to say in 1291. His poem was finished in 1319. Twenty - eight years elapsed between the time when it was first conceived and ...
... Divine Comedy appeared to him a year after the death of Beatrice , when he was twenty - six years old , that is to say in 1291. His poem was finished in 1319. Twenty - eight years elapsed between the time when it was first conceived and ...
Contents
FIFTH ANNUAL General Meeting June 11 1907 | 1 |
SIXTH ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING JUNE 25 1908 | 7 |
SUMMARY KNIGHTS FEES BY PAUL VINOGRADOFF FELLOW of | 15 |
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Abbot Aborigines ancient appears Aryan Asia Babelon British Academy chronicler Church cities classical Clazomenae coinage Comus criticism Cyzicus Dante darics Divine Divine Comedy domini doubt early edition Edward Caird eighteenth century electrum electrum coins England English epic Eteocretans evidence fact father French gold coins Greece Greek History of Britain honour Ibid Indo-European inscriptions issued Italian Italy John King Lampsacus language later Latin Latium Ligurians literary literature Lord matter Milton modern monks mother non-Aryan original Paradise Lost passage Patricians Paul's Pelasgians Persian Phocaea phratry Plautus poem poet poetic poetry pomerium probably Professor Burrows promiscuous prose Quintilian quod R. S. Conway race reason regard regis Roman Sabine Samson sancti satraps says scholar seems Siculi silver Spenser's staters style terms of relationship tion translation tribal tribes Umbrians verse Westminster Westmonasteriensi whilst words writers καὶ