Archive
Displaying 4,890 digitized works or clusters of works
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251
The arts of writing, reading, and speaking
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252
Aspects of literature
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253
Aspects of the speech in the later Greek epic ...
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254
The Assembly of Gods: or, The Accord of Reason and Sensuality in the Fear of Death. By John Lydgate.The assembly of gods, or, The accord of reason and sensuality in the fear of death
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255
AssonanceThe Encyclopædia britannica; a dictionary of arts, sciences, literature and general information.
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256
Assyrian grammarwith paradigms, exercises, glossary, and bibliography
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257
An Attempt at Some Improvement in that Subordinate Department of Literature, Orthography.The Weekly entertainer; or Agreeable and instructive repository. Containing a collection of select pieces, both in prose and verse; curious anecdotes, instructive tales, and ingenious essays on different subjects
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258
An attempt to render the pronunciation of the English language more easy to foreigners: being the abridgment of a larger work ... entitled. A dictionary of the English and French languages, ... By William Smith, A.M
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259
An attempt to simplify English grammar :with observations on the method of teaching it
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260
Attempts at Classical Metres in QuantityThe Cornhill magazine.
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261
Attic & Elizabethan tragedy,
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August Wilhelm Schlegel and Goethe's Epic and Elegiac VerseThe Journal of English and Germanic philology.
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263
Aureate terms;a study in the literary diction of the fifteenth century,
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264
Author's PrefacePoems of Gerard Manley Hopkins now first published :
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Authorities on English PronunciationThe Modern language review.
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266
The authors :A poem
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The Authorship of the Old English Bede: A Study in RhythmAnglia.
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The Authorship of the Secunda PastorumPublications of the Modern Language Association of America.
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269
Auxilia Vergiliana;or, First steps in Latin prosody.
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270
Bacon's nova resuscitatio; or, The unveiling of his concealed works and travels,
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271
Bacon's nova resuscitatio; or, The unveiling of his concealed works and travels,
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272
Bacon's nova resuscitatio; or, The unveiling of his concealed works and travels,
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273
Bad English exposed: a series of criticisms on the errors and inconsistencies of Lindley Murray and other grammarians,
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274
The ballad in literature,
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275
The ballad minstrelsy of Scotland.
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276
Ballad PoetryJohnson's new universal cyclopædia
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The ballade,
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278
Ballades and rondeaus, chants royal, sestinas, villanelles, &c.,
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279
Ballads in the Cumberland dialect
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280
Bashō and the Japanese poetical epigram
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281
The basic law of vocal utterance,
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The basis of English rhythm
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283
Batavian anthology;or, Specimens of the Dutch poets; with remarks on the poetical literature and language of the Netherlands, to the end of the seventeenth century.
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284
Bathyllus redivivusAn essay proving that the grammar, call'd Sheridan's, is a transcript from the Royal-Grammar: and, that his additions are erroneous, impertinent, and insufficient. By John Greer, A.M. and student in physick.
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285
Beadle's dime patriotic speaker :being extracts from the splendid oratory of Judge Holt ... together with poems for the hour.
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286
The Bearing of the Cursus on the Text of Dante's De Vulgari EloquentiaProceedings of the British Academy.
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287
Beaumont, Fletcher, and MassingerEnglische Studien.
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288
Beaumont, Fletcher, and MassingerEnglische Studien.
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289
Beauties of eminent writersselected and arranged for the instruction of youth in the proper reading and reciting of the English language: calculated also to instil into the mind the principles of wisdom and, virtue, and to give it an early taste for the acquisition of useful knowledge, to which is now added, a concise system of English grammar, with exercises in orthography. In two volumes. Sold separately or together. For the use of schools and private classes. Second edition. By William Scott, teacher of the English language and geography in Edinburgh.
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290
The beauties of modern literature, in verse and prose;to which is prefixed, a preliminary view of the literature of the age.
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291
The beauties of poetry display'd.Containing observations on the different species of poetry, and the rules of English versification. Exemplified by a large collection of beautiful passages, similies, and descriptions, from the writings of Addison, Akinside, Blacklock, Dryden, Gay, Garth, Grey, Milton, Pope, Prior, Rowe, Shakespeare, Smart, Swift, Thomson, Waller, West, Young, and other celebrated poets. In two volumes.
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292
The beauties of poetryor, a portable repository of English verse, on an entire new plan. In three books. Grammar display'd, Classes of Rhymes: And Poems made To suit the Times, &c. By William Le Tans'ur, Author of The Elements of Music: The Life of Holy David, in Verse: Melodia Sacra: and The Christian Warrior, &c.
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293
Beecher's recitations and readings :humorous, serious, dramatic, including prose and poetical selections in Dutch, French, Yankee, Irish, Backwoods, Negro, and other dialects
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The beginnings of English literature,
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The beginnings of poetry,
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Beginnings of the "classical" heroic couplet in England.
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The beginnings of the English secular and romantic drama:a paper read before the Shakespeare Association on Friday, February 29, 1920.
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Bellum grammaticaleor, the grammatical battel royal. In reflections on the three English grammars, publish'd in about a year last past. In a letter to the learned and ingenious whilom assistant to the learned Mr. Benjamin Morland of Hackney. With a postscript to Heterologus, usher to the learned Dr. Busby.
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Ben Jonson and the Classical SchoolPublications of the Modern Language Association of America
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Beowulf 1422Modern language notes.