10 résultats pour "bunyan"
- Bunyan, John - écrivain.
- Bunyan, John - littérature.
- AFFLUX DE LA GRACE (L’) (résumé & analyse) John Bunyan
- JOHN BUNYAN: Vie et oeuvre
- Bunyan John , 1628-1688, né à Elstow, prédicateur dissident et écrivain anglais, chaudronnier de son état.
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Le Voyage du pèlerin de John Bunyan
Chrétien combat le monstre Apollyon EXTRAITS Chr étien et Fid èle arri vent à la Foire aux Vanité s Je vis ensuite, dans mon rêve, que les pèle rins sortirent du désert et aperçurent devant eux une ville nommée la ville de Vanité. Là se tient une foire qui dure toute l'année et que l'on nomme la Foire aux Vanités, parce que la ville où on la tient est plus légère que la vanité même, et que tout ce qui s'y apporte ou s'y vend n'est...
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From The Pilgrim's Progress - anthology.
First, The pilgrims were clothed with such kind of raiment as was diverse from the raiment of any that traded in that fair. The people, therefore, of the fair, made agreat gazing upon them: some said they were fools, some they were bedlams, and some they are outlandish men. (I Corinthians ii.7, S.) Secondly, And as they wondered at their apparel, so they did likewise at their speech; for few could understand what they said; they naturally spoke the language ofCanaan, but they that kept the f...
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African Literature
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INTRODUCTION
African Literature, oral and written literature produced on the African continent.
that few scholars of African culture know any African languages, and few Africans know an African language other than their own. The best-known literatures in Africanlanguages include those in Yoruba and Hausa in West Africa; Sotho, Xhosa, and Zulu in southern Africa; and Amharic, Somali, and Swahili in East Africa. In West Africa, Yoruba writing emerged after Bishop Ajayi Crowther, a former slave, developed a script for the language and in 1900 published the first Yorubatranslation of the Bible...
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- John Bunyan
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Children's Literature
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INTRODUCTION
Kate Greenaway's May Day
The delicate skill and graceful simplicity of English artist Kate Greenaway's illustrations delighted children and impressed
thinkers, including art critic John Ruskin.
With the development of vernacular literature, particularly after the invention of printing, more children's books appeared. The publications of the first English printer,William Caxton, included the Book of Curtesye (1477), a collection of rhymes that sets forth rules of conduct for a “goodly chylde.” Eight years later Caxton printed Le Morte d'Arthur (1469-1470; The Death of Arthur ) by English translator and compiler Sir Thomas Malory, which became the basis for later treatments of the A...