Find link

language:

jump to random article

Find link is a tool written by Edward Betts.

Longer titles found: Richard Jenkyns (professor) (view)

searching for Richard Jenkyns 15 found (106 total)

alternate case: richard Jenkyns

Legacy series (170 words) [view diff] exact match in snippet view article find links to article

1093/ref:odnb/36110. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.) Richard Jenkyns (1992). The Legacy of Rome: A New Appraisal. Oxford University Press
David Ferry (poet) (1,467 words) [view diff] exact match in snippet view article
metrical force, and cumulative effect. Writing in the TLS, classicist Richard Jenkyns called Ferry's Aeneid "the best modern version...both for its loyalty
Joost de Blank (750 words) [view diff] exact match in snippet view article find links to article
p. 744. "No. 40073". The London Gazette. 12 January 1954. p. 305. Richard Jenkyns (2011). Westminster Abbey. Harvard University Press. pp. 74–. ISBN 978-0-674-06197-2
Einsiedeln Itinerary (402 words) [view diff] exact match in snippet view article find links to article
Rome. Greenwood Publishing Group. pp. 186–. ISBN 978-0-313-33564-8. Richard Jenkyns (1992). The Legacy of Rome: A New Appraisal. Oxford University Press
Theodore Paleologus (Junior) (1,267 words) [view diff] exact match in snippet view article
the 19th century. In his 2004 book on Westminster Abbey, historian Richard Jenkyns wrote that "those inclined to Romantic fantasy may toy with the notion
Tolkien and the modernists (2,761 words) [view diff] exact match in snippet view article find links to article
"cosy little universe" for "vulnerable people". In 2002, the critic Richard Jenkyns in The New Republic criticized it for lacking psychological depth.
Alexander Thomson (2,344 words) [view diff] exact match in snippet view article find links to article
(Architectural Association, London), No 9, Summer 1985 Dignity and Decadence, Richard Jenkyns, Harvard University Press, 1991. "Greek" Thomson, Ed. Gavin Stamp and
Jane Austen (13,005 words) [view diff] exact match in snippet view article find links to article
during those years. The Juvenilia are often, according to scholar Richard Jenkyns, "boisterous" and "anarchic"; he compares them to the work of 18th-century
The Lord of the Rings (11,131 words) [view diff] exact match in snippet view article find links to article
preservationist, which turns out to be death to literature itself". The critic Richard Jenkyns, writing in The New Republic, criticized the work for a lack of psychological
Aeneid (9,221 words) [view diff] exact match in snippet view article find links to article
Epic, Oxford, 2007. Karl Gransden, Virgil's Iliad, Cambridge, 1984. Richard Jenkyns, Virgil's Experience, Oxford, 1998. Michael Burden, A woman scorned;
Literary reception of The Lord of the Rings (5,300 words) [view diff] exact match in snippet view article find links to article
childhood, an impossibly prelapsarian sense of peace?" The critic Richard Jenkyns, writing in The New Republic in 2002, criticized a perceived lack of
Paleologus of Pesaro (3,488 words) [view diff] exact match in snippet view article find links to article
whereas others, such as English historians John Julius Norwich and Richard Jenkyns, considered it plausible that they were the last true descendants of
Sylvie and Bruno (4,996 words) [view diff] exact match in snippet view article find links to article
standardize time, and orient themselves to clocks more frequently." In 2011, Richard Jenkyns of Prospect described Carroll's use of baby talk in the book as "embarrassing
Paquier Event (1,656 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
Erba, Elisabetta; Premoli Silva, Isabella; Farrimond, Paul; Tyson, Richard; Jenkyns, Hugh C. (July 2004). "Organic-carbon deposition in the Cretaceous
George Wickham (8,422 words) [view diff] exact match in snippet view article find links to article
of his financial situation and the violence of his reproaches". For Richard Jenkyns, Wickham's deceptiveness is the "pivot upon which the entire plot turns"