Literary Studies, Volumen1Longmans, Green, 1879 |
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Página 47
... seems , he went up with much hope and strong excitement ; for , quiet and calm as seem those ancient dormitories , to him , as to many , the going among them seemed the first entrance into the real world -- the end of tor- pidity - the ...
... seems , he went up with much hope and strong excitement ; for , quiet and calm as seem those ancient dormitories , to him , as to many , the going among them seemed the first entrance into the real world -- the end of tor- pidity - the ...
Página 162
... seems to be written , perhaps more than any other , con amore , and with a relish ; and this seems to be the reason why , notwith- standing the unpleasant nature of its plot , and the absence of any very attractive character , it is yet ...
... seems to be written , perhaps more than any other , con amore , and with a relish ; and this seems to be the reason why , notwith- standing the unpleasant nature of its plot , and the absence of any very attractive character , it is yet ...
Página 187
... seems to be a law of the imagination , at least in most men , that it will not bear concentration . It is essentially a glancing faculty . It goes and comes , and comes and goes , and we hardly know whence or why . But we most of us ...
... seems to be a law of the imagination , at least in most men , that it will not bear concentration . It is essentially a glancing faculty . It goes and comes , and comes and goes , and we hardly know whence or why . But we most of us ...
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abstract Bagehot beauty believe called certainly character civilisation Coleridge common Constitution Corn Laws coup d'état course Cowper defect delineation described doubt Economist Edinburgh Review England English essay excellence excitement existence expression fact Falstaff fancy father fear feel France French genius Government habit Hartley Hartley Coleridge Hawick House of Commons human idea imagination India instinct intellectual kind labour Lady Mary least letters literary lived Lord Lord Eldon Lord Macaulay Louis Napoleon ment Milton mind moral nation nature never object observe opinion pain Paradise Lost passions peculiar Percy Bysshe Shelley perhaps persons pleasure poems poet poetry political principle question remarkable Rydal Water seems sense Shakespeare Shelley singular society sort speak speculative Sydney Smith talk theory things thou thought tion truth Whigs whole Wilson wish words Wortley writing young youth