John Inglesant: A RomanceMacmillan, 1891 - 445 |
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Strona viii
... human life is to be described simply as such . The characters are , so to speak , sublimated : they are only introduced for a set purpose , and having fulfilled this purpose - were it only to speak a dozen words - they vanish from the ...
... human life is to be described simply as such . The characters are , so to speak , sublimated : they are only introduced for a set purpose , and having fulfilled this purpose - were it only to speak a dozen words - they vanish from the ...
Strona ix
... human interest , and colour , and life . This democratic rabble know by their own experience that it is only when these dry details are touched by the enchanter's wand that they strike them with any sense of reality , any likeness to ...
... human interest , and colour , and life . This democratic rabble know by their own experience that it is only when these dry details are touched by the enchanter's wand that they strike them with any sense of reality , any likeness to ...
Strona 30
... human learning , and taking advantage of every scrap of knowledge and information for the advancement of his purpose . Of elegant and fascinating manners , and accustomed to courtly life abroad , he was , perhaps , the most influential ...
... human learning , and taking advantage of every scrap of knowledge and information for the advancement of his purpose . Of elegant and fascinating manners , and accustomed to courtly life abroad , he was , perhaps , the most influential ...
Strona 31
... human utterances that living men ever spoke ; and while from these he drew illus- trations of human life when reading Plato - which he did every day — he led his pupil to perceive , as he did more fully when he grew older , that ...
... human utterances that living men ever spoke ; and while from these he drew illus- trations of human life when reading Plato - which he did every day — he led his pupil to perceive , as he did more fully when he grew older , that ...
Strona 32
... humanity , he prepared his pupil to receive in after years ( for it is a lesson that cannot be fully learned until middle life is approached ) that kindly love of humanity ; that sympathy with its smallest interests ; that toleration of ...
... humanity , he prepared his pupil to receive in after years ( for it is a lesson that cannot be fully learned until middle life is approached ) that kindly love of humanity ; that sympathy with its smallest interests ; that toleration of ...
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2nd Edition 3rd Edition A. W. VERRALL altar appeared Archbishop ARCHIBALD GEIKIE beautiful Book brother Cardinal Cavaliere Chapel Christ Church Church of England College Court Cressy crowd Crown 8vo death delight Divine Don Agostino Duke ELEMENTARY England English ESSAYS Eustace excited Extra fcp eyes F. T. PALGRAVE FASNACHT Father St favour Ferrar garden gentleman Globe 8vo GREEK hand heard HISTORY holy Illustrated Ingle Inglesant's Italian Italy Jesuit John Inglesant Johnny King King's Lady Lauretta light Little Gidding looked Lord Biron MACMILLAN Malvolti mind Molinos morning Nicholas Ferrar night once Oxford palace Papists party passed POEMS priests Prof Puritan religious replied Roman Rome SCHOOLS seemed SERMONS servants speak spirit spoke stood story strange streets things thought tion told took Translated Umbria Vanneo voice vols walked wonderful words
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