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SPECIMENS.

Song of Canute

Archbishop Aldred's Curse

St. Godric's Hymn.

Sister's Rhyme

Hymn to St. Nicholas

Rhyme of Flemings and Normans (1178)

Hugh Bigott's Boast

The Here Prophecy.

Layamon's Brut:-Part of Introduction

The Ormulum:-Part of Dedication

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Injunction as to Spelling

The Ancren Riwle:-Eating and Fasting

Robert of Gloucester's Chronicle:-French Language in England

Minot; First Invasion of France by Edward III.

Vision of Piers Ploughman :-Commencement

Piers Ploughman's Creed:-Description of Piers

Chaucer:-House of Fame; Eagle's Address to Chaucer

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The Mendicant Friar (from the Prologue) 143

Emily (from the Knight's Tale)

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Part of the Clerk's Tale of Griselda

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Temple of Mars (from the Knight's Tale) 146

Passages relating to the Host

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Fortescue:-Difference, etc.; French King and People

Malory:-Morte Arthur; Death of Lancelot

Wyntoun:-Chronicle

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Blind Harry :-Wallace; Part of Battle of Shortwoodshaw

L'Envoy.

Sir Thomas More :-Letter to his Wife
Udall :-Ralph Roister Doister

Spenser:-Fairy Queen; Belphabe

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Milton:-College Exercise; His Native Language
Waller :-His Last Verses

Marvel :-The Picture of T. C.

Mandeville-Fable of the Bees; Anticipation of Adam Smith
Burke-Speech on Nabob of Arcot; Devastation of the Carnatic
Reflections on French Revolution; Hereditary Principle
Letter to Mr. Elliot; True Reform

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Letters on a Regicide Peace; Right Way of making War

Cowper-Table Talk; National Vice

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Conversation; Meeting on the Road to Emmaus
Lines on his Mother's Picture

Darwin:-Botanic Garden; "Flowers of the Sky"

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The Compass

Burns

:- -To a Mouse

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Epistle to a Young Friend

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די דן

Coleridge :-Love, Hope, and Patience, in Education
Scott:-Marmion; The Battle (part)

Campbell:-Adelgitha

Theodric; Letter of Constance

Crabbe:-Tales of the Hall; Story of the Elder Brother (part).
Moore:-Lalla Rookh; Calm after Storm

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Mrs. Browning:-A Child's Grave at Florence

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Aurora Leigh; Pictures of England

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Tennyson :-The Lord of Burleigh

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Wellington.

R. Browning: The Pied Piper of Hamelin (part)
Hood:-The Death-bed.

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MANUAL OF THE HISTORY

OF

ENGLISH LITERATURE.

THE LANGUAGES OF MODERN EUROPE.

THE existing European languages may be nearly all comprehended under five divisions. First, there are the Celtic tongues of Ireland and Wales, and their subordinate varieties. Secondly, there are the tongues founded upon the Latin spoken by the old Romans, and thence called the Romance or the Neo-Latin, that is, the New Latin, tongues; of these, the principal are the Italian, the Spanish, and the French. The Romaic, or Modern Greek, may be included under the same head. Thirdly, there are what have been variously designated the Germanic, Teutonic, or Gothic tongues, being those which were originally spoken by the various barbarian races by whom the Roman empire of the West was overthrown and overwhelmed (or at the least subjugated, revolutionized, and broken up) in the fifth and sixth centuries. Fourthly, there are the Slavonic tongues, of which the Russian and the Polish are the most distinguished. Fifthly, there are the Tschudic tongues, as they have been denominated, or those spoken by the Finnic and Laponnic races. Almost the only language which this enumeration leaves out is that still preserved by the French and Spanish Biscayans, and known as the Basque, or among those who speak it as the Euskarian, which seems to stand alone among the tongues not only of Europe but of the world. It is supposed to be a remnant of the ancient Iberian or original language of Spain.

The order in which four at least of the five sets or classes of languages have been named may be regarded as that of their probable introduction into Europe from Asia or the East, or at any rate of their establishment in the localities of which they are now severally in possession. First, apparently, came the Celtic, now driven on to the farthest west; after which followed

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in succession the Latin, the Gothic, and the Slavonic, pressing upon and urging forward one another like so many waves.

Their present geographical position may also be set forth in few words. Those of the Celtic type are found, as just mentioned, in the West, the Latin generally in the South, the Slavonic in the East, the Tschudic in the North, and the Gothic over the whole of the central region. The chief exception is, that one Tschudic language, the Madgyar, is spoken in Hungary, at the south-eastern extremity of Europe.

The English is essentially or fundamentally a Gothic tongue. That is to say, it is to be classed among those which were spoken by the main division of the barbaric invaders and conquerors of the Roman empire, and which are now spread over the whole of the central portion of the European continent, or what we may call the body of Europe as distinguished from its head and limbs. These Gothic tongues have been subdivided into the High-Germanic, the Low-Germanic, and the Scandinavian; and each of these subordinate groups or clusters has a certain character of its own in addition to the common character by which they are all allied and discriminated from those belonging to quite other stocks. They may be said to present different shades of the same colour. And even in their geographical distribution they lie as it were in so many successive ridges ;-the High-Germanic languages farthest south; next to them, the LowGermanic, in the middle; and then, farthest north, the Scandinavian. The High-Germanic may be considered to be principally represented by the modern classic German; the Low-Germanic by the language of the people of Holland, or what we call the Low Dutch, or simply the Dutch; the Scandinavian, by the Swedish, Danish, or Icelandic.

It may be remarked, too, that the gradation of character among the three sets of languages corresponds to their geographical position. That is to say, their resemblance is in proportion to their proximity. Thus, the High-Germanic and the Scandinavian groups are both nearer in character, as well as in position, to the Low-Germanic than they are to each other; and the Low-Germanic tongues, lying in the middle, form as it were a sort of link, or bridge, between the other two extreme groups. Climate, and the relative elevation of the three regions, may have something to do with this. The rough and full-mouthed pronunciation of the High-Germanic tongues, with their broad vowels and guttural combinations, may be the natural product of the bracing mountain air of the south; the clearer and neater articulation of the Low-Germanic ones, that of the milder

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