100 resultados para Romantic
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Authorities: v. 2, p. 357-359.
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Appendices: I. Some account of Mary and Charlotte Stephenson (1771-1850; 1772-1853), sisters of Sir Benjamin Stephenson, written by their niece, Charlotte Augusta Stephenson (p. 363-370)--II. The romantic story of Mrs. George Coxe (1753-1843), told by her great-niece, Charlotte Augusta Stephenson (p. 371-377)
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"This Chronicle of the Cid is wholly translation, but it is not the translation of any single work."--Pref. to the Chronicle.
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Bibliography: p. 405-411.
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Half-title p. : Critical essays.
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"Wessex edition."
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III. Novels of ingenuity: v. 14. Desperate remedies.--v. 15. The hand of Ethelberta.--v. 16. A Laodicean.--v. 17. A changed man, [The waiting supper, and other tales: concluding with the Romantic adventures of a milk-maid] Poetical works.--v. 18. Wessex poems and other verses; poems of the past and the present.--v. 19. The Dynasts; parts 1st and 2d.--v. 20. The Dynasts, part 3d. Time's laughingstocks.--v. 21. Satires of circumstance; Moments of vision and Miscellaneous verses.
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First appeared in the author's "Romantic tales," 1808, vol. 2. cf. Summers, The Gothic Quest.
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On a man's writing memoirs of himself.--On decision of character.--On the application of the epithet romantic.--On some of the causes by which evangelical religion has been rendered unacceptable to persons of cultivated taste.
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A combination of two separate works by the respective authors; vols. 1-3, by Cook, published under titles "America, picturesque and descriptive," "Pen pictures of America", and "The Anglo-Saxons historic and romantic America". Vols. 4-5, by Forbes-Lindsay, pub. under title: "America's insular possessions".
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On a man's writing memoirs of himself.--On decision of character.--On the application of the epithet romantic.--On some of the causes by which evangelical religion has been rendered unacceptable to persons of cultivated taste.
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A brief chronology of the French drama in the nineteenth century.--The romantic movement.--Victor Hugo.--Alexandre Dumas.--Eugène Scribe.--Emile Augier.--Alexandre Dumas fils.--Victorien Sardou.--Octave Feuillet.--Eugène Labiche.--Meilhac and Halévy.--Emile Zola and the present tendencies of French drama (1881)--A ten years' retrospect: 1881-1891.