An Introduction to a Course of German Literature: In Lectures to the Students of the University of LondonJ. Taylor, 1830 - 157 ˹éÒ |
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˹éÒ 3
... critical creed , and will furnish you with a key to those views , which will be laid before you in the course of my lectures , and which , without such previous explanation , might possibly appear paradoxical , and sometimes even ...
... critical creed , and will furnish you with a key to those views , which will be laid before you in the course of my lectures , and which , without such previous explanation , might possibly appear paradoxical , and sometimes even ...
˹éÒ 89
... critical powers , and for his extensive erudition , enumerated , during his lectures , delivered at Berlin , on the Theory and History of the Arts of Design , the greater part of those philosophers , who GERMAN LITERATURE . 89 *
... critical powers , and for his extensive erudition , enumerated , during his lectures , delivered at Berlin , on the Theory and History of the Arts of Design , the greater part of those philosophers , who GERMAN LITERATURE . 89 *
˹éÒ 116
... critical formation to taste , prepared for the awakening of reason , and for the triumph of that belief which was to be founded thereon . At the German universities of Prague , Freiburg , Greifswald , Basel , and Heidelberg , the study ...
... critical formation to taste , prepared for the awakening of reason , and for the triumph of that belief which was to be founded thereon . At the German universities of Prague , Freiburg , Greifswald , Basel , and Heidelberg , the study ...
˹éÒ 139
... critical paraphrase of the New Testa- ment . The modern biographer of Erasmus , Adolph Müller , tells us , that there was hardly a pope , prince , or cardinal among his contemporaries , to whom he had not dedicated some small treatise ...
... critical paraphrase of the New Testa- ment . The modern biographer of Erasmus , Adolph Müller , tells us , that there was hardly a pope , prince , or cardinal among his contemporaries , to whom he had not dedicated some small treatise ...
˹éÒ 146
... Not that I believe him to have been invariably correct in his version , or to have used the most refined terms , or to have employed the highest critical power ; but because the language , taken as 146 INTRODUCTION TO A COURSE OF.
... Not that I believe him to have been invariably correct in his version , or to have used the most refined terms , or to have employed the highest critical power ; but because the language , taken as 146 INTRODUCTION TO A COURSE OF.
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ÆNEID ÆSCHYLUS appears artist called character Charlemagne chivalry classical clergy cultivation culture dialect divine dramatic earthly Egyptian elements emperor empire endeavoured English epic epos Erasmus eternal Europe European mankind evinced expression faith feeling and fancy Foolscap 8vo freedom German literature GOWER STREET gradually Grecian Greek art hierarchy High German language Hindoos history of mankind honour human mind Iliad impulse individual influence intellect JOHN TAYLOR Julius Charles Hare Latin Laurentius Valla laws Lectures literary LL.D Luther lyrical lyrical poetry ment mental middle ages modern moral nations nature northern object Pagan papal passions peculiar perfect period poet poetical poetry political pope popular princes PRINTED FOR JOHN Professor protestantism racter reason Reformation religion religious representative Roman Rome Second Edition sensual sentiments songs soul spirit splendour striving Suabian tendency tion TREATISE truth Ulrich von Hutten universal University of London UPPER GOWER STREET words worldly youth
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˹éÒ 154 - Ein' feste Burg ist unser Gott, Ein' gute Wehr und Waffen, Er hilft uns frei aus aller Not, Die uns jetzt hat betroffen. Der alt' böse Feind Mit Ernst er's jetzt meint; Groß' Macht und viel List Sein' grausam Rüstung ist, Auf Erd
˹éÒ 59 - Dim as the borrowed beams of moon and stars To lonely, weary, wandering travellers, Is reason to the soul; and, as on high Those rolling fires discover but the sky, Not light us here, so reason's glimmering ray Was lent, not to assure our doubtful way, But guide us upward to a better day. And as those nightly tapers disappear, When day's bright lord ascends our hemisphere; So pale grows reason at religion's sight; So dies, and so dissolves in supernatural light.