The History of Fiction: Being a Critical Account of the Most Celebrated Prose Works of Fiction, from the Earliest Greek Romances to the Novels of the Present Day, Volume 1Carey and Hart, 1842 - Fiction |
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Page ix
... reader in a form more agreeable than I could pretend to exhibit it . A similar caprice has induced me to " confine myself to little more than a meagre outline " of the romance of Amadis de Gaul , though one of the most curious of the ...
... reader in a form more agreeable than I could pretend to exhibit it . A similar caprice has induced me to " confine myself to little more than a meagre outline " of the romance of Amadis de Gaul , though one of the most curious of the ...
Page xiii
... the Amadis , " & c . ( p . 399. ) Now , from this passage , the reader would suppose that I had denied the influence of romances of chivalry on the heroic romance , or at least that I had written nothing ADVERTISEMENT . xiii.
... the Amadis , " & c . ( p . 399. ) Now , from this passage , the reader would suppose that I had denied the influence of romances of chivalry on the heroic romance , or at least that I had written nothing ADVERTISEMENT . xiii.
Page xxiv
... readers , " as Warburton has remarked , ( Notes to Love's Labour's Lost , ) " and instead of giving us an account of the Tales of Chivalry , one of the most curious and interesting parts of the sub- ject of which he promised to treat ...
... readers , " as Warburton has remarked , ( Notes to Love's Labour's Lost , ) " and instead of giving us an account of the Tales of Chivalry , one of the most curious and interesting parts of the sub- ject of which he promised to treat ...
Page xxvi
... reader is not furnished with a view of the progress of Fiction in continuity ; he cannot trace the imitations of successive fablers , nor the way in which Fiction has been modified by the manners of an age . There is besides little or ...
... reader is not furnished with a view of the progress of Fiction in continuity ; he cannot trace the imitations of successive fablers , nor the way in which Fiction has been modified by the manners of an age . There is besides little or ...
Page xxvii
... reader to form some idea of the nature and merit of the works themselves , and of the transmission of fable from one age and country to another . HISTORY OF FICTION . CHAPTER I. Origin of fictitious Narrative INTRODUCTION . xxvii with a ...
... reader to form some idea of the nature and merit of the works themselves , and of the transmission of fable from one age and country to another . HISTORY OF FICTION . CHAPTER I. Origin of fictitious Narrative INTRODUCTION . xxvii with a ...
Contents
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Common terms and phrases
adventures afterwards Amadis de Gaul Amadis of Greece ancient appeared Apuleius arrived Arthur avoit beautiful Boccaccio Britany brother castle celebrated century character Chariclea Charlemagne Chevalier Chloe chronicle combat composition Constantinople court damsel Daphnis daughter death Decameron emperor enamoured enchanted England Esclarmonde estoit exploits fables Fabliaux fairy fait father favour fiction Florisel forest France French Galaor Gesta Gesta Romanorum giant Greece Greek romances Gyron Heliodorus hero Huon husband incidents Italian Josaphat king knights lady Lancelot du Lac Latin length Lisuarte lover magic mance manners Marc Meliadus ment Merlin metrical romance mistress monarch Ogier origin Orlando palace Palmerin Paris Partenopex Perceforest Perceval poem poets prince princess qu'il queen received reign romances of chivalry romantic fiction Round Table Sangreal Saracens seneschal Seven Wise Masters soon story Theagenes tion tournaments tout translated Tristan Tristan and Yseult written Ysaie Yseult
Popular passages
Page 92 - Drink to me only with thine eyes, And I will pledge with mine; Or leave a kiss but in the cup And I'll not look for wine. The thirst that from the soul doth rise Doth ask a drink divine; But might I of Jove's nectar sup, I would not change for thine.
Page xix - And as real history gives us not the success of things according to the deserts of vice and virtue, Fiction corrects it, and presents us with the fates and fortunes of persons rewarded or punished according to merit.
Page 202 - Owns the monarch's high command : Thence to Britain shall return (If right prophetic rolls I learn), Borne on Victory's spreading plume, His ancient sceptre to resume ; Once more, in old heroic pride, His barbed courser to bestride ; His knightly table to restore, And brave the tournaments of yore.
Page 344 - Verily, neighbour, in its way, it is the best book in the world : here the knights eat and sleep, and die in their beds, and make their wills before their deaths ; with several things, which are wanting in all other books of this kind.
Page 373 - Next, (for hear me out now, readers,) that I may tell ye whither my younger feet wandered; I betook me among those lofty fables and romances which recount in solemn cantos the deeds of knighthood founded by our victorious kings and from hence had in renown over all Christendom.
Page 119 - Mahometans affords the groundwork of those fables, which have been so wildly disfigured in the romances of chivalry, and so elegantly adorned by the Italian muse. In the decline of society and art, the deserted cities could supply a slender booty to the Saracens; their richest spoil was found in the churches and monasteries, which they stripped of their ornaments and delivered to the flames: and the tutelar saints, both Hilary...
Page 170 - Volume sont contenus les nobles faictz darmes du vaillant roy Meliadus de Leonnoys: Ensemble plusieurs autres nobles proesses de Chevalerie, faictes...
Page 186 - Levitical law," (Numbers v. 11—31,) continues that accurate writer, " there was prescribed a mode of trial, which consisted in the suspected person drinking water in the tabernacle. The mythological fable of the trial by the Stygian fountain, which disgraced the guilty by the waters rising so as to cover the laurel wreath of the unchaste female who dared the examination, probably 'had its origin in some of the early institutions of Greece or Egypt. Hence the notion was adopted in the Greek romances,...
Page 182 - And ay they grew, and ay they threw, As they wad faine be neare ; And by this ye may ken right weil They were twa luvers deare.
Page 335 - ... when a boy he was immoderately fond of reading romances of chivalry, and he retained his fondness for them through life ; so that (adds his Lordship) spending part of a summer'" at my parsonagehouse in the country, he chose for his regular reading the old Spanish romance of Felixmarte of Hircania, in folio, which he read quite through'.