Proceedings of the British Academy, Volume 7British Academy, 1915 - Humanities |
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Page 308
... Don Quixote in the spirit in which it was written three hundred years ago . It comes down to us with an incomparable prestige , enriched by the sparkling commentary of a thousand perspicacious and ingenious critics . Don Quixote is now ...
... Don Quixote in the spirit in which it was written three hundred years ago . It comes down to us with an incomparable prestige , enriched by the sparkling commentary of a thousand perspicacious and ingenious critics . Don Quixote is now ...
Page 310
... Don Quixote itself might well have taken the form of a conte . That this was Cervantes's primitive design is , however , extremely probable ; there are indications that he meant to end his narrative with the fourth chapter . Though the ...
... Don Quixote itself might well have taken the form of a conte . That this was Cervantes's primitive design is , however , extremely probable ; there are indications that he meant to end his narrative with the fourth chapter . Though the ...
Page 316
... Don Quixote fully . These sweeping statements are more easily made than proved ; against Blanco White's view may be set that of a Spanish Cervantist , that Don Quixote is best read in English - a dark saying which I do not presume to ...
... Don Quixote fully . These sweeping statements are more easily made than proved ; against Blanco White's view may be set that of a Spanish Cervantist , that Don Quixote is best read in English - a dark saying which I do not presume to ...
Contents
CORRESPONDING FELLOWS | 9 |
OFFICERS AND COUNCIL 191516 | 12 |
OFFICERS AND COUNCIL 191617 | 17 |
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Academy Ambrosiaster Anatolia ancient appears Asia Minor Assyr Ball Balliol Bruyne Bywater c'est called Cassiod Cassiodorus century Cervantes Cervantes's character Christian classical coins commentary copy Dante death doctrine Don Quixote doubt earth edition English Épinal epistles Europe evidence fact feeling followed France Greek Hebrew Himyarite hommes human inscriptions Islam Italian Jerome jeunes Jews Joseph Warton kings later lecture literature Mahdi Marcionite modern monogram mort Moslem nations nature never original Osmanli Oxford Paris passages Pelagian Pelagius perhaps philosophy Phrygia poem poet poetic poetry population primitive probably Professor Ps-Hier Pseudo-Jerome Pseudo-Jerome MSS qu'il race regarded Reichenau religious Roman Sabaean Sancho scholars seems Seldjuk Semitic Shakespeare Socrates soldat Solutrean soul spirit suggest Sumerian things thought triliteralized Turkey Turkish Turkmen Turks verses Vulgate Warton words writing